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Hamline University law professor charged with state income-tax evasion
Hamline teacher accused of failing to pay, file returns
By Richard Chin
rchin@pioneerpress.com
Updated: 09/09/2009 11:24:43 PM CDT
Hamline University Law School associate professor Robin K. Magee, an expert in criminal law and a frequent critic and commentator on police and justice issues, has allegedly run afoul of the law herself.
Magee, 46, of St. Paul, has been charged in Ramsey County District Court with 11 felony charges of state income-tax evasion, including failure to pay taxes, failure to file tax returns and filing a false or fraudulent tax return, during the tax years 2004-2007.
According to the criminal complaint, a Minnesota Department of Revenue investigation found that Magee filed her Minnesota income-tax return on time only once in the period from 1991 to 2003 and that she failed to timely file returns for 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.
In those four years, Magee's wages from Hamline University ranged from $86,872.83 to $112,217.51 a year, according to the complaint.
The amount of taxes owed to the state for 2004-2007, not including penalty and interest, was estimated at $4,938, according to the complaint.
When Magee did file returns, she omitted interest, dividend, capital gains and pension income in the years of 1998, 2000, 2001 and 2003, the complaint says.
The complaint also says Magee claimed eight exemptions on her W-4 form, even though she is single and has no dependents.
Magee could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
Magee told Revenue Department staff that she has worked at Hamline University for 17 years as a law professor but is not familiar with tax law, according to the complaint.
According to her biography on the Hamline University School of Law Web site, she teaches criminal procedure, criminal law, property, police practices and a seminar on race and law.
But it also says that Magee, a University of Michigan law school graduate, "concentrated in the area of criminal, entertainment and tax law" while in private practice.