http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... S/11290320
IMO anyone who bought his stuff thinking it was legal should get their money back.
Ex-Ashland restaurateur won't pay any restitution
Man found guilty in phony business scam in Florida in August
November 29, 2010
Chris Conrad
By Chris Conrad
Mail Tribune
A former Ashland restaurant owner found guilty of creating a fake business to avoid taxes will not pay restitution for his crimes, according to federal court documents.
A Florida federal court could not find evidence that anyone actually lost money from Eugene "Gino" Casternovia's scheme. In fact, Casternovia was convicted on conspiracy charges, which suggests he had not followed through with the alleged scam.
The only money he is obliged to pay is a $200 court fee, according to federal court documents filed Nov. 12.
Casternovia, 62, was one of three men sentenced in federal court in Pensacola, Fla., for helping people set up sham businesses to avoid taxes.
Casternovia's wife, Kathyrn Casternovia, said the judge's refusal to award restitution in this case points toward his innocence.
"There was no money stolen from anyone," she said. "All of (Gino's) clients were made whole."
Kathryn Casternovia said her husband plans to appeal his seven-year sentence. She hopes he will be returned to Oregon should he serve a prison term. "It would be good if he was near his family and friends," she said.
He had faced a possible 25-year sentence and $750,000 in fines for his role in a complicated scheme involving tax fraud, wire fraud and money laundering, attorneys for the U.S. Department of Justice and Internal Revenue Service said.
"That amount of money was completely arbitrary," Kathryn Casternovia said.
On March 31, following a month-long trial in Pensacola, a federal jury returned guilty verdicts against eight people who were involved in promotion of fraudulent schemes through a company known as Pinnacle Quest International, PQI or Quest International.
The government determined that Casternovia and the others presented and sold tax-fraud schemes at trade shows and conferences around the world, including a presentation for 400 people aboard a cruise ship in the Mediterranean in May 2007.
In Casternovia's pre-sentencing hearing Sept. 16, he said he "sold very few PQI memberships, as established through the testimony of Mark Lyon, and was never part of the PQI leadership."
Casternovia was arrested in August 2008. He and his wife have lived in Ashland for more than 25 years and once owned the now-defunct Northlight vegetarian restaurant and the Rainforest Cafe.
Reach reporter Chris Conrad at 541-776-4471 or e-mail
cconrad@mailtribune.com.
Reader Comments:
Larry Graves
Gino was charged with and convicted of showing other people how to work within the letter of the byzantine tax laws to minimize their tax liabilities. As Buck points out in his comment, everything he did was perfectly legal, but "stuff the government doesn't want you to know about" (read: all members of Congress do this). The jury was unable to address the bigger-picture issues of this case, and convicted him on the narrow grounds presented.
Gino and his ideas are a threat to our current rogue government, and so he is attacked. The article does not point out that the federal judge holding the Restitution Hearing literally blasted the prosecutor in the most scathing of terms, because the government was not able to produce ONE SINGLE WITNESS who would claim that they had been injured by Gino's actions. Of course they couldn't -- everyone benefited, and NO ONE was injured. Gino was persecuted for the sake of statist ideology.
Our government, which we created to help us, has instead beggared each of us, along with all our progeny. Our leaders line their own pockets and those of their banker buddies, while we suffer the consequences. God help anyone who threatens to reduce the taxes taken from each of us to feed this beast. As a people we are too complacent or frightened to do anything about it -- just the way the powers that be, Republican and Democrat alike, want it. Gino remains innocent of any wrongdoing, in my opinion. He is my hero.
Yesterday, 1:19:51 PM
Buck Eichler
I've received very impressive brochures and portfolios on offshore investment plans, home-based businesses that make next to nothing but are write-offs, etc. They presented themselves as perfectly legal, but strategies the government doesn't want you to know about. I smelled a rat, but many people don't, or maybe just don't sniff very hard.
Yesterday, 10:58:31 AM
Dominic
So Buck, what is your point, except for the chance to see your name in the paper?
Yesterday, 8:54:40 PM
Whenever you hear a man speak of his love for his Country, it is a sign he expects to be paid for it. – H. L. Mencken
Death and Taxes. Ya Think?