Slammer For Snipes: 36 Months In Prison

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TRAVIS REED | April 24, 2008 10:25 PM EST | AP

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Wesley Snipes gestures as he leaves federal court after he was sentenced to threes years in prison for willful failure to file a tax return on April 24, 2008 at the U.S. Federal Courthouse in Ocala, Fla.. Snipes was acquitted in February of five counts including felony fraud and conspiracy charges. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)

OCALA, Fla. — Wesley Snipes called on famous friends to vouch for him, highlighted his clean criminal record and even wrote the government $5 million in checks _ all in an effort to convince a judge that his conviction on tax charges should cost him nothing more than home detention and some public service announcements.

None of it worked. The "Blade" actor was ordered to do hard time.

Snipes was sentenced to three years in prison Thursday for failing to file tax returns, the maximum penalty _ and a victory for prosecutors who sought to make an example of the action star.

Snipes' lawyers had spent much of the day in court offering dozens of letters from family members, friends _ even fellow actors Woody Harrelson and Denzel Washington _ attesting to his good character. His attorneys recommended he be given home detention and ordered to make public service announcements because his three convictions were all misdemeanors and the actor had no previous criminal record.

But U.S. District Judge William Terrell Hodges said Snipes exhibited a "history of contempt over a period of time" for U.S. tax laws, and granted prosecutors the three-year sentence they requested _ one year for each of Snipes' convictions of willfully failing to file a tax return from 1999-2001.

"In my mind these are serious crimes, albeit misdemeanors," Hodges said.

Snipes apologized while reading from a written statement for his "costly mistakes," but never mentioned the word taxes.

"I am an idealistic, naive, passionate, truth-seeking, spiritually motivated artist, unschooled in the science of law and finance," Snipes said. He said his wealth and celebrity attracted "wolves and jackals like flies are attracted to meat." He called himself "well-intentioned, but miseducated."

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Snipes surprised the court before Hodges handed down the sentence by offering the government three checks totaling $5 million in unpaid taxes over several years, money the government first denied but then accepted. Prosecutors called it "grandstanding" to avoid jail time, and a mere down payment on the actor's still-undetermined multimillion dollar tax bill.

The action star of the "Blade" trilogy, "White Men Can't Jump," "Jungle Fever" and other films hasn't filed a tax return since 1998, the government alleged. Snipes and the IRS will work in future civil proceedings to determine his full tax liability, plus interest and penalties.

Snipes was the highest-profile criminal tax target in years, and prosecutors called for a heavy sentence to deter others from trying to obstruct the IRS. The government alleged Snipes made at least $13.8 million for the years in question and owed $2.7 million in back taxes.

Snipes was acquitted in February of five additional charges, including felony tax fraud and conspiracy. Co-defendants Douglas P. Rosile and Eddie Ray Kahn were convicted on both those counts. Kahn, who refused to defend himself in court, was sentenced to 10 years, while Rosile received 54 months. Both will serve three years of supervised release. Snipes will serve one year of supervised release.

Snipes and Rosile remain free and will be notified when they are to surrender to authorities. Defense attorney Carmen Hernandez signaled in court that Snipes would pursue an appeal.

Kahn was the founder of American Rights Litigators, and a successor group, Guiding Light of God Ministries, that purported to help members legally avoid paying taxes. Rosile, a former accountant who lost his licenses in Ohio and Florida, prepared Snipes' paperwork.

Snipes maintained in a years-long battle with the IRS he did not have to pay taxes, using fringe arguments common to "tax protesters" who say the government has no legal right to collect. After joining Kahn's group, the government said Snipes instructed his employees to stop paying their own taxes and sought $11 million in 1996 and 1997 taxes he legally paid.

Prosecutors sought to justify the maximum sentence by raising those and other details from the IRS investigation, as well as a tax loss even for years in which Snipes was acquitted of failing to file a return. Such "relevant conduct" is allowed by law for a judge's consideration at sentencing.

Criminal tax prosecutions are relatively rare _ usually the cases are handled in civil court, where the government has a lower burden of proof. Prosecutors said Snipes' case was important to send a message to would-be tax protesters not to test the government.

Snipes' lawyers said he was no threat to society, and called four character witnesses Thursday, including television's Judge Joe Brown, who incited applause from the gallery by suggesting Snipes was no different than "mega-corporate entities" that legally avoid taxes.

Hodges twice halted the proceedings to quiet the crowd, threatening to clear everyone out if they made another outburst.

Defense attorneys Hernandez and Daniel Meachum said Snipes was unfairly targeted for prosecution because he's famous. Meachum called prosecutors "big game hunters," selectively prosecuting the actor while Kahn's 4,000 other clients remained free.

Hodges was not swayed.

"One of the main purposes which drives selective prosecution in tax cases is deterrence," the judge said, while denying it had anything to do with his sentence. "In some instances, that means those of celebrity stand greater risk of prosecution. But there's nothing unusual about it, nor is there anything unlawful about it. It's the way the system works."

OCALA, Fla. — Wesley Snipes called on famous friends to vouch for him, highlighted his clean criminal record and even wrote the government $5 million in checks _ all in an effort to convince a j...
OCALA, Fla. — Wesley Snipes called on famous friends to vouch for him, highlighted his clean criminal record and even wrote the government $5 million in checks _ all in an effort to convince a j...
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- Ozy I'm a Fan of Ozy 3 fans permalink
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This is just a stab at Hollywood!
The criminals is DC get away with everything. What a joke!

Snipes should have been fined but prison time? Please!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 AM on 04/25/2008
- wolfgangmo I'm a Fan of wolfgangmo 25 fans permalink
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Another example of the Black Tax. If you black, then they attack, if you white, they don't do shite.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 AM on 04/25/2008
- AnnArky I'm a Fan of AnnArky 37 fans permalink
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Anyone who refuses to pay taxes is a true American Hero. Thanks, Wesley.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 AM on 04/25/2008

If Scooter didn't serve time neither should SNipes...just another brother to be locked up.
Florida, great job once again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 AM on 04/25/2008
- JamesAndre I'm a Fan of JamesAndre 5 fans permalink
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Yes, three years is harsh, and there is one reason that Wesley Snipes is doing time while others have gone free for worse offenses -

No, not because he is black. Because of Martha Stewart.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 04/25/2008
- elcojonu I'm a Fan of elcojonu 28 fans permalink

Martha went in for insider trading; that's different than OWING money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 04/25/2008
- JamesAndre I'm a Fan of JamesAndre 5 fans permalink
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They came down on America's homemaker for some inside knowledge. That reset the standard for celebrity treatment. Throw in Britney and Lindsay and you get three years for tax evasion..

But mostly he was really, really stupid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 AM on 04/25/2008
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I must be missing something. What does Martha have to do with it?

Look if I have to pay , then Snipes has to pay. I don't like it, but I do it ,so that I Don't Go To Jail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 04/25/2008

If you pay so that You Don't Go To Jail, then pay. That doesn't mean that you have to believe that you SHOULD go to jail if you don't pay -- just that you might or will. You might pay in order to stay out of jail, knowing that you have the right NOT to pay, without going to jail. You should thus support the rights of others who DO have the courage to not pay (or to not file the paperwork, in this case -- not the same as not paying). You should thus be disgusted when those individuals, like Wesley Snipes and his co-defendants, go to jail, even if you or they "should have known" that it would happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 AM on 04/25/2008
- ann1 I'm a Fan of ann1 12 fans permalink

A waste of tax payers time and money. Vitter spent time with call girls and got NOTHING!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 04/24/2008

We could have built a school or reinforced the levees, or bought our troops body armor with the money Wesley owed. Vitter's sperm, not so much. The former has a much more significant cost to our country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 04/25/2008
- grn1 I'm a Fan of grn1 9 fans permalink

Yeah right, too late for those ideas. The money is for war and the jack-offs who executed it, Snipes milions a pittance compared to war appropriations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 AM on 04/25/2008
- elcojonu I'm a Fan of elcojonu 28 fans permalink

Could it be because he's a brother and was tried in a Federal Court in the South ?
3 years on misdemeanor charges where the dedendant is willing to pay what he owes and is truly repentant. I'm sure he would have fared much better in a Federal Courtroom in his home state of New York.
If the Judge is a White Cracker, he must be trying to impress his fellow Cracker, KKK sympathizers at his Country Club.
JUSTICE IN AMERICA - SOUTHERN STYLE
Shit like this still goes on in the 21st. Century.

STAY STONG WES - PRACTICE YOUR TAO.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 04/24/2008
- Wanod I'm a Fan of Wanod 4 fans permalink

Thats Florida for you, steal election's, and now this...They're the one's that need to be in jail, Snipes should have been given the opportunity and pay. It's amazing how in this case the judge talk's about making an example. This is as Bias as it come's, but i wouldn't expect anything else from a state like Florida...That state is the bottom of the snake barrel. I think he will win his appeal on this one, and rightfully so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 PM on 04/24/2008
- johnmorgan I'm a Fan of johnmorgan 17 fans permalink

But Scooter Libby's sentence was "too harsh" according to Bush and had to be commuted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 04/24/2008
- johnmorgan I'm a Fan of johnmorgan 17 fans permalink

If he gets three years for this small crime, what does Bush deserve for killing a million Iraqis and 4000 American soldiers?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 04/24/2008

3 years for 3 misdomeanors......seems a little on the harsh side. The judge called them "In my mind these are serious crimes." Uhhh.....someone please tell me if I'm wrong, but aren't serious crimes classified as felonies? Shouldn't he be sentenced based on the classification of these laws not some redefinition by a judge/ As a matter of fact by legal definition a misdemeanor is a minor crime. Someone who has no criminal record is given the maximum sentence......just seems a little out of whack with other sentences you hear see. I'm not advocating the home detention he got but the maximum penalty?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 04/24/2008
- Driver125 I'm a Fan of Driver125 5 fans permalink

It's quite clear to me. The country NEEDS to have Wesley Snipes to go to prison every bit as much as it NEEDS Scotter Libby to be a free man. We must be able to discern the differences between the two so as to be better able to understand the pioneering new concepts engineered by the Bush administration and its revolutionary Dept. of Justice. All hail Decon Ashcroft, Speedy Gonzales, and John Yoo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 PM on 04/24/2008

Driver125 : YEP !!

***** Post of The Thread *****

( In god They trust. ) All Others pay dues...


More to follow. -ralph

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 AM on 04/25/2008
- puffhost I'm a Fan of puffhost 11 fans permalink

I file my tax return and moan every year. Not for the money lost but the money mismanaged. How great would it be if we could select how our money would be used. Let them have enough to pay administration and federal salaries and then check boxes for the rest. I guarantee you then our school system would be tops and there would be no more war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 04/24/2008

It is scary to see the government putting people in prison for taxes. This guy has money, why not just get his money, and penalties and so on, and be done with it?

Why the need to send someone to prison? Who's next.... the average american, living paycheck to paycheck and barely making ends meet..... is that what's next for americans?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 04/24/2008
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You've got to be joking. He has so much money that taking some of it would not be a penalty for breaking a federal law, committing a felony. Get it? He's not an average American. He's not an average ANYthing!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 04/24/2008

If penalties and interest were the only punative measure for tax evasion, there would be a whole lot more people cheating and playing the audit lottery. Let this anti-American scumbag rot in jail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 04/24/2008

You, sir, are the anti-American scumbag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 04/25/2008
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Why do you think people make sure they pay their taxes?---because they are afraid of going to prison if they don't!

Can you imagine millions of cases of " I don't want to pay taxes, I'll wait for the IRS to prosecute me, and then I'll just pay up and say SORRY..my bad!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 04/25/2008
- ChicagoBob I'm a Fan of ChicagoBob 23 fans permalink
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!

Equal treatment under the law???????????

I am far from a fan of this guy but "making an example" of someone, anyone, does not serve the cause of justice.

Also, trying to SCARE people into changing their behavior is totally ineffective. Think about "This is your brain on drugs." Did the incident of drug use and abuse go down because of the millions spent on those silly ads? No.

The system has failed in this case. Snipes may have to do the time but justice has been injured in this process.

!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 04/24/2008
- shag11 I'm a Fan of shag11 11 fans permalink

He busted Halle Berry's eardrum, fuck 'em.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 04/24/2008
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