Ugorji Timothy Wilson Onyeani v. Commissioner

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 2020
StatusPublished

This text of Ugorji Timothy Wilson Onyeani v. Commissioner (Ugorji Timothy Wilson Onyeani v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ugorji Timothy Wilson Onyeani v. Commissioner, (tax 2020).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2020-15

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

UGORJI TIMOTHY WILSON ONYEANI, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 15303-16. Filed January 16, 2020.

Ugorji Timothy Wilson Onyeani, pro se.

Sarah E. Sexton Martinez, Eugene A. Kornel, and Megan E. Heinz, for

respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

LAUBER, Judge: During the first quarter of 2015 petitioner received about

$750,000 from entities allegedly seeking to purchase Nigerian crude oil. Shortly

thereafter he attempted to wire $300,000 to a foreign bank. The U.S. Secret Serv-

ice flagged the transaction and alerted the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or re- -2-

[*2] spondent). Believing that petitioner intended “quickly to depart from the

United States or to remove his property therefrom,” the IRS made a termination

assessment under section 6851(a).1 Performing a bank deposits analysis, the IRS

determined that petitioner had received taxable income of $802,083 as of May 13,

2015. It terminated his taxable year as of that date, assessed tax of $288,546, and

collected that sum by levy on his bank account following his unsuccessful chal-

lenge to the termination assessment in Federal District Court. See Onyeani v.

United States, No. 15-C-05917, 2016 WL 3149729 (N.D. Ill. June 3, 2016).

Petitioner filed a timely Federal income tax return for 2015, reporting none

of the income that was subject to the termination assessment. As required by sec-

tion 6851(b), the IRS sent him a notice of deficiency. It determined unreported

income of $802,083, a deficiency of $273,407, a civil fraud penalty, and an accu-

racy-related penalty as an alternative.

Acknowledging considerable mystery about the underlying transactions, we

decide this case primarily on the basis of burdens of proof. Respondent has estab-

lished that petitioner received unreported income, and we sustain his deficiency

determination except to the extent that petitioner substantiated deductions or off-

1 All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round most monetary amounts to the nearest dollar. -3-

[*3] sets therefrom. But respondent has not met his burden of showing an

underpayment of tax, within the meaning of section 6664(a)(1), that could give

rise to any penalty.

FINDINGS OF FACT

We find the following facts on the basis of the evidence adduced at trial and

the facts deemed established by the Court’s September 21, 2018, order making

absolute a prior order to show cause.2 Petitioner resided in Illinois when he peti-

tioned this Court.

Petitioner was born in Nigeria and subsequently moved to the United King-

dom (U.K.), where he obtained citizenship and began practicing medicine. In

2009 he was accused of misconduct, including the falsification of medical records,

that ultimately led to the revocation of his U.K. medical license. He moved to the

United States and became a permanent resident in 2012. He obtained an MBA

degree from DeVry University in 2015. As of that time he had no background,

training, or experience in the oil and gas business.

2 On February 2, 2018, respondent moved for an order to show cause why proposed facts and evidence, as set forth in 159 paragraphs of a proposed stipula- tion, should not be accepted as established. On September 21, 2018, we deemed admitted all but 16 paragraphs of the proposed stipulation, making minor changes to some paragraphs for clarity. -4-

[*4] A. AHPE

Petitioner incorporated American Hope Petroleum & Energy Corp. (AHPE)

on January 23, 2015, before completing his MBA program. He was AHPE’s reg-

istered agent and sole shareholder, listing his residence as its address. AHPE had

no officers or employees, no board of directors, and no formal capital structure. It

paid no wages, maintained no business formation records, had no financial or ac-

counting records of any kind, and never filed any Federal or State tax returns. It

held no annual (or other) meetings of officers, directors, or shareholders and per-

force had no minutes of such meetings. It had no business address or phone num-

ber distinct from petitioner’s. It obtained no permits or business licenses and

maintained no insurance policies of any kind.

But AHPE did have a partially-completed website, which petitioner created

soon after incorporating it. The website described AHPE as an “independent

crude oil purchasing and selling broker” headquartered in Chicago. AHPE assert-

edly had “a team of experts,” including “fund managers, partners, and advisors,”

who were “securely invested in crude purchasing” and about to expand by acquir-

ing an offshore oil block in Nigeria. Supposedly overseeing this activity was a

“board of directors” and an “Advisory Board,” ensuring that AHPE operated in

accordance with “best practice[s]” and “corporate governance standards.” -5-

[*5] Petitioner substantiated none of these representations, and all appear to have

been false. AHPE had no discernible business activity. As of February 2015 it

consisted of little more than a name on three Bank of America (BoA) bank ac-

counts that petitioner opened in its name in late January 2015.

B. Alleged Oil Transactions

Petitioner testified that AHPE was in the business of brokering the sale of

crude oil owned by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). He

produced three documents, supposedly issued by NNPC in February and March

2015, purporting to authorize AHPE to sell 5 million barrels of Nigerian light

crude--worth over $250 million--then on board vessels off the Nigerian coast.

None of these documents was authenticated by any representative of NNPC. At

various times NNPC has issued “scam alerts” warning about “advance fee

schemes” peddled by “unsavory characters purporting to be * * * contractors to

NNPC.”

Petitioner produced two documents, each captioned “Sales Purchase Agree-

ment/Commercial Invoice,” on AHPE’s letterhead. Each document lists AHPE as

the seller and AHPE Global Resources, Ltd., allegedly a Nigerian entity, as the

“co-seller.” Each document is signed by petitioner on behalf of the seller and

purports to cover the sale of 2 million barrels of Nigerian light crude. -6-

[*6] One document lists Tianjin Commodity Exchange Co., Ltd. (Tianjin), a

Chinese entity, as the buyer. This document has signatures and stamps purport-

edly affixed by an agent of Tianjin. The other document lists LaSalle International

Inc. (LaSalle), a U.S. company, as the buyer, and Fengying International Co., Ltd.

(Fengying), a Chinese entity, as the “co-buyer.” This document has a signature

and stamp purportedly affixed by an agent of Fengying. The document lists Pierre

Yenokian as the president of LaSalle, but it does not bear his signature or that of

any other LaSalle representative. Both documents call for discharge of the crude

oil at Yangshan Port, a harbor for container ships south of Shanghai, China.

Each document specified a per-barrel sales price equal to the “average of

Brent’s three daily crude price averages,” less a discount. The Tianjin agreement

specified a provisional price of $56 per barrel minus a $4-per-barrel discount. The

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