Brockman v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2022
Docket4:22-cv-00202
StatusUnknown

This text of Brockman v. United States (Brockman v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brockman v. United States, (S.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT September 30, 2022 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION

ROBERT T. BROCKMAN, § Plaintiff, § §

§ VS. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:22-CV-202 § § UNITED STATES OF AMERICA § §

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Pending before the Court is Plaintiff Robert T. Brockman ’s (“Brockman”) motion to abate an Internal Revenue Service (“the IRS” or “the Government”) jeopardy assessment and jeopardy levy under 26 U.S.C. § 7429.1 The motion (Dkt. 10) is DENIED, and this civil matter is DISMISSED. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On October 1, 2020, Brockman was charged in a 39-count indictment in the Northern District of California with a variety of financial crimes, including tax evasion; wire fraud affecting a financial institution; money laundering; failure to file Foreign Bank Account Reports; evidence tampering; and destruction of evidence. The IRS asserts that Brockman owes it over $1.4 billion in taxes, fraud penalties, and interest and that this

1 Brockman passed away after the jeopardy assessment and levy were imposed. (Dkt. 59). matter “represents the largest jeopardy assessment/levy case in the history of the United States” and features tax fraud on an “unprecedented” scale. The scale and complexity of the schemes through which Brockman allegedly

avoided paying U.S. taxes are immense; the Government’s jeopardy assessment recommendation report alone spans 70 pages, not counting the many exhibits and attachments. The Government has presented evidence in both this matter and Brockman’s criminal case2 supporting its conclusion that Brockman used a labyrinthine web of nominees,3 offshore entities, foreign bank accounts, and encrypted communications to

mask his assets and avoid reporting billions of dollars in income between 2004 and 2018. Much of the information on which the Government relies was provided by two men who were participants in and beneficiaries of Brockman’s alleged fraud: Robert Smith (“Smith”) and Evatt Tamine (“Tamine”). Smith is a billionaire investor and former business associate of Brockman ’s who stated in a non-prosecution agreement that he

evaded U.S. taxes between 2000 and 2015 using a system of offshore trusts, companies, and bank accounts that was similar to Brockman’s system and was in fact recommended by Brockman. Tamine is an Australian barrister who, according to the Government, was Brockman ’s nominee, a self-described “figure head” who served as the nominal trustee or director of Brockman ’s offshore entities. IRS agents and Bermudan police executed a

2 The undersigned judge also presided over Brockman’s criminal case, which was dismissed when Brockman passed away. See Southern District of Texas case number 4:21-CR-9. 3 “The nominee theory focuses upon the taxpayer’s relationship to a particular piece of property. The ultimate inquiry is whether the taxpayer has engaged in a legal fiction by placing legal title to property in the hands of a third party while actually retaining some or all of the benefits of true ownership.” Holman v. United States, 505 F.3d 1060, 1065 (10th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). search warrant for a raid on Tamine ’s home office in Bermuda in September of 2018, and Tamine has been a cooperating witness in the Government’s investigation of Brockman. The Government contends that Brockman evaded taxes by concealing his income,

and that he concealed his income by using nominees to conceal his ownership and control of assets—a strategy of “owning nothing but controlling everything.” To take one illustrative example that weaves Brockman, Tamine, and Smith together, the Government alleges that Brockman formed an entity called Point Investments (“Point”) to invest in private equity funds with Smith with a focus on U.S.-based software and technology

companies. Point held bank accounts in Bermuda, Switzerland, and Singapore. Brockman did not report his ownership of Point or its bank accounts on his tax forms. Below is a diagram of Point’s ownership structure, which included entities in Bermuda, Nevis, and the British Virgin Islands. Vista Equity Funds, at the bottom of the diagram, is the Cayman Islands entity in which Brockman invested with Smith: Point Purpose Trust 4. Eugene Brockman Charitable Trust (Bermuda) {Bermuda} Evatt Tamine, Trustee* Evatt Taming, Trustee** 100% ownership

100% ownership 100% ownership

100% Common shares. 100% Investment shares

LP ownership VISTA EQUITY FUNDS***

Tamine was the nominal trustee or director of the entities in the Point ownership structure; but he has told investigators (and testified to this Court, at Brockman’s competency hearing in his criminal case) that in reality Brockman controlled the entities, including the Bermudan trusts at the top of the ownership chain. Through his undisclosed beneficial ownership of the entities in the Point ownership structure, the Government alleges that Brockman avoided U.S. income taxes on taxable investment income and gains in the amounts of $2.3 billion of net capital gains, $29 million in interest income, and $5.9 million in dividends during the years 2004 through 2018. Brockman set up two other investment vehicles, Edge Capital Investments (Edge”) and Cabot Global Investments

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(“Cabot”), that had ownership structures similar to Point’s and that also generated large amounts of unreported income. With the money from his untaxed income, Brockman, according to the Government, “bought vacation homes, investment real estate, a jet aircraft, and a luxury yacht[.]” As he did with Point and other entities, the Government contends that Brockman concealed his ownership of and control over these purchases. For instance, when Brockman bought real estate in Colorado with his untaxed Edge and Cabot income to develop for his personal use, the properties’ titles were held by Colorado companies that were owned by a Bermudan company that was, in turn, owned by a Bermudan trust of which Tamine was the trustee:

Heraclides Charitable Trust (Bermuda) Evatt Tamine. Trustee 100% ownership Bank transfers from Brockman's entities to Regency Management to purchase land, improvements, and operating costs (2010-2016): Regency Management Ltd <> ~Edge Capital Investments ($15 million total) eeun) <—_ Cabot Global Investments ($7 million total) 100% ownership 100% ownership

100% ownership

Concealed Assets: Concealed Assets: 1. “Frying Pan Canyon Ranch” AKA “Tie 1. 230 McFarlane Guich Rd, Aspen CO Camp Ranch” (“Aspen Vacation Home") ce 121 Ash Rd, Basalt CO 2. Lot 6, Peachblow PUD co 93801 Frying Pan Road o 17.22 acres along Frying Pan Canyon Road 2. 300 McFarlane Gulch Rd, Aspen CO 3. Lot 8, Glenwood Springs CO 4. Lot 22, Aspen Glen

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Brockman exercised complete control over the Colorado properties; Tamine and the other officers of the associated entities were nominees. The Government provided evidence that Brockman went to great lengths to keep

the IRS—which he called “The House”—from learning about his connections to the various entities and properties. He used an encrypted private email server to communicate with Tamine, and the two used aliases ( “Redfish” for Tamine, “Permit” for Brockman) in their communications. Decrypted email conversations between Brockman and his business associates obtained in the Tamine raid discuss the falsification, backdating, concealment,

and destruction of documents. Tamine testified to this Court at Brockman’s competency hearing that, on one occasion, he traveled to the home of a recently deceased business associate at Brockman’s behest to destroy documents and hard drives pertaining to Brockman.

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Brockman v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brockman-v-united-states-txsd-2022.