FTC Settlement: Tax Relief Scammers Agree to Pay More Than $15 Million

American Tax Relief Scheme Bilked Consumers With False Promises They Qualified for IRS Programs to Reduce Tax Debts

Under an agreement with the  Federal Trade Commission, the defendants in a scheme that allegedly bilked  consumers out of more than $100 million by falsely claiming they could reduce  their tax debts must surrender more than $15 million in cash and assets to  settle charges that they violated federal law.   Under the settlement order, American Tax Relief LLC and its leader,  Alexander Seung Hahn, are banned from telemarketing, and they and Hahn’s wife,  Joo Hyun Park, are permanently prohibited from selling debt relief  services.  As part of the FTC’s ongoing efforts to protect consumers in financial distress,  this is the agency’s first action against a tax relief company.

The FTC filed charges against  American Tax Relief, Hahn, and Park in September 2010.  A court subsequently halted the allegedly  illegal practices, froze the defendants’ assets, and appointed a receiver to  manage the company pending resolution of the case.

In August 2012, the court entered  partial summary judgment in favor of the FTC, finding that the defendants falsely  claimed they already had significantly reduced the tax debts of thousands of  people and falsely told individual consumers they qualified for tax relief programs  that would significantly reduce their tax debts.  The court found Hahn personally liable for  the challenged practices.

The settlement order imposes a  $103.3 million judgment against ATR, Hahn, and Joo HyunPark.  It also imposes judgments of $18 million and  $595,000, respectively, against relief defendants Young Soon Park and Il Kon Park, Joo Park’s parents, who  were not charged with participating in the scheme but were found by the court  to have received significant sums.  The  judgments will be suspended oncethe defendants and relief defendants have surrendered  assets that total more than $15 million, including cash, a home in  Beverly Hills and a condo in Los Angeles, jewelry and gold items, and a 2005  FerrariThe full judgments will become due immediately if the defendants or  relief defendants are found to have misrepresented their financial condition.

The  order also prohibits ATR, Hahn, and Park from misrepresenting material facts  about any products or services, collecting payments from the scheme’s customers,  selling or otherwise benefitting from customers’ personal information, and  failing to properly dispose of customer information.

The Commission  vote to approve the proposed stipulated final judgment was 5-0.  The stipulated final judgment was entered by the U.S. District Court for the Central  District of California on January 29, 2013.

Courtesy of Federal Trade Commission.

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