Los Angeles, CA 1/6/2011 11:43:43 PM
News / Law

IRS AGENT PLEADS GUILTY TO CHEATING ON TAXES

An IRS agent in California could spend up to nine years in prison after admitting that he’d cheated on his own federal taxes.

Federal prosecutors in Los Angeles say 51-year-old Albert Bront pleaded guilty Wednesday  to filing phony tax returns for himself and two innocent relatives. The false tax form claims included bogus alimony and mortgage deductions.

The former Santa Clarita resident told a federal judge that he filed fraudulent tax returns for himself from 2003 to 2007 by claiming excessive deductions and failing to report income. He also acknowledged filing fraudulent returns on behalf of two unknowing relatives.

Bront has been on unpaid leave from the IRS since he was charged in 2009. His sentencing is set for April 13.