Society pair hit with tax evasion charges
- Share via
Deepa Bharath
The district attorney on Friday filed the biggest tax evasion case
ever in the county and the state, against a Newport Beach man and his
ex-wife, who are renowned philanthropists in the community, officials
said.
Richard Engel, 59, owner of Costa Mesa-based Powerplant
Maintenance Specialist Inc., has been charged with five felony counts
of tax evasion and two felony counts of falsifying tax returns. His
ex-wife, Jolene Engel, 52, was charged with seven counts of tax
evasion and one count of filing a false tax return.
Prosecutors say the couple did not report more than $190 million
in income and failed to pay the state about $11 million in income
taxes, penalties and the cost of investigation from 1998 to 2001.
Richard and Jolene Engel pleaded not guilty to all charges at the
Harbor Justice Center in Newport Beach on Friday morning. They both
made bail, which was set at $500,000 each. A pretrial hearing has
been set for Oct. 10.
If convicted, the defendants could each get up to 16 years and
eight months in state prison.
If the corporation is found guilty of evading taxes, it may never
be allowed to do business in the state again, officials said.
Neither Richard Engel nor his attorney, Walter Coal, were
available for comment. Jolene Engel also could not be reached.
But Robert Bachman, an attorney for Engel’s Costa Mesa company,
said he does not believe the company owes any money to the state.
“The company denies there’s any money owed,” he said. “I’ve looked
at the affidavit, and the numbers have been overstated. There are
several misrepresentations there.”
Bachman said he is waiting for 88 boxes of documents from the
district attorney’s office that he needs to review.
“This is the first tax evasion case this office has seen where the
money owed to the state is in the eight figures,” Orange County
District Atty. Tony Rackauckas said in a press conference on Friday.
He said the couple was “living lavishly in Newport Beach, flying
on a Lear jet, driving beautiful cars and charging personal luxury
items, such as jewelry, to the company.”
Rackauckas said his office is “vigorously pursuing” such cases in
the interest of fairness.
“Here is the bottom line: Everyone has to pay his or her fair
share of taxes,” he said. “No one has the right to refuse to pay
their taxes and spend their money on luxury goods.”
The charges came after two years of tedious investigation by tax
officials, said Denise Azimi, a spokeswoman for the State Franchise
Tax Board.
“It started with a search warrant in January 2001, when we seized
bank records, computer records and several other documents,” she
said. “Our investigators painstakingly reconstructed their income.”
The case is significant because of the amounts involved, Azimi
said.
“This is a record for us,” she said. “These people have failed to
report nearly $200 million in income. That’s not small change.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.