United States v. Annazette Collins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2025
Docket24-2161
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Annazette Collins (United States v. Annazette Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Annazette Collins, (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-2161 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

ANNAZETTE COLLINS, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 21-CR-00199 — Jorge L. Alonso, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 9, 2025 — DECIDED DECEMBER 18, 2025 ____________________

Before ST. EVE, LEE, and KOLAR, Circuit Judges. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. After a career in the Illinois state leg- islature, Annazette Collins began evading tax liability. A jury found her guilty of failing to file tax returns and making false statements on her tax returns, and the district court sentenced Collins to one year of imprisonment and a year of supervised release. Collins now challenges her convictions on the grounds there was insufficient evidence her conduct was will- ful and the district court made erroneous evidentiary rulings 2 No. 24-2161

that violated the United States Constitution. She also claims the district court wrongly denied her motion to correct her sentence. We affirm. I. Background A. Factual Background After over a decade of service in the Illinois state legisla- ture, Collins began two main professional ventures in 2013. First, she started a lobbying and consulting firm named Kourtnie Nicole, Corp. (“KNC”), of which she was the sole owner and president. Collins drew from her legislative expe- rience to advise businesses working closely with the Illinois state government. In her second venture, Collins sold life in- surance for American Income Life Insurance Company (“AIL”). For at least the four calendar years preceding 2014, Collins annually filed individual tax returns. In her individual tax re- turn for the 2013 calendar year, for example, she reported the roughly $33,000 she had paid herself from her consulting business. Collins also signed and authorized the filing of KNC’s corporate tax return, which reflected the same com- pensation to Collins. In subsequent years, Collins began to significantly un- derreport her personal income or entirely fail to file a tax re- turn. For the 2014 calendar year, Collins earned about $118,000 in total income, reflecting about $96,000 from AIL and around $40,000 from her company, KNC. In her tax re- turn for that year, however, Collins reported no income from AIL, and a total figure of only about $11,500. In signing her 2014 return, she attested, as she did in other years, that under penalty of perjury the information was “true, correct, and No. 24-2161 3

complete.” Also in 2014, Collins discontinued her employ- ment relationship with AIL; the company terminated her in September 2014 for fraudulently submitting insurance poli- cies for individuals who did not apply for them or did not ex- ist. Collins continued her underreporting the following year. In her 2015 tax return, she represented her total income as only around $10,000 despite the actual figure approaching $84,000. Her actual total income reflected $75,000 she trans- ferred from KNC to her personal accounts, deductions for work expenses, and over $11,000 in KNC funds used for per- sonal expenses—including tuition for her daughter’s private school and camp at SeaWorld. KNC had funds, too, taking in about $188,000 in 2015 in gross receipts. Collins then failed to file any tax return—corporate or per- sonal—for the 2016 calendar year. This was not for a lack of income. KNC itself earned $162,000 in gross receipts in 2016. Additionally, Collins transferred $50,000 from KNC to herself and spent over $18,000 of KNC’s funds on personal expenses, including her daughter’s summer camp and home mortgage payments. This added up to a gross individual income for Collins of approximately $70,000. Collins’s conduct did not escape the Internal Revenue Ser- vice. In 2016, the IRS issued Collins a notice of over $96,000 in unreported income stemming from the omission of AIL from her 2014 tax return, resulting in approximately $25,000 in out- standing tax liability. A few months after receiving this notice, Collins amended her 2015 individual tax return by incorpo- rating her unreported AIL income into that return. Addition- ally, Collins paired the newly reported income with approxi- mately $50,000 in newly claimed deductions, including nearly 4 No. 24-2161

$8,000 for “work clothes” and an almost ten-fold increase in her claimed business miles travelled, from around 3,000 to 22,000. These deductions effectively halved the tax liability created by her newly reported AIL income. In 2017, Collins entered into a payment plan with the IRS to pay the roughly $25,000 in tax liability identified in the IRS’s notice. Collins discontinued making payments in 2019, and by October 2023 she owed more than the amount origi- nally assessed due to interest and penalties. B. Procedural Background A grand jury indicted Collins in March 2021. The super- seding indictment, filed two months later, charged her with six counts: three counts under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) for making false statements in her individual income tax returns for cal- endar years 2014, 2015, and 2018; and three counts under 26 U.S.C. § 7203 for willfully failing to file a tax return, corre- sponding to her missing individual tax return for 2016 and her missing corporate tax return for calendar years 2015 and 2016. In advance of trial, the government moved in limine to (1) preclude Collins from presenting evidence concerning her amended 2015 tax return or her 2017 payment plan, (2) admit evidence Collins was terminated by AIL for cause to show Collins was less likely to forget her AIL employment when submitting her 2014 return, and (3) exclude certain opinions from Collins’s proposed expert witness that channeled Col- lins’s own hearsay statements. The court granted the govern- ment’s first motion, denied the second, and conditionally de- nied the third contingent on whether Collins ultimately testi- fied as to the assertions upon which her expert would rely. No. 24-2161 5

The case proceeded to trial. The government introduced evidence of Collins’s earnings, the income she reported to third parties, records of her tax returns, and tax legislation she sponsored in 2008 that would raise the Illinois income tax rate. The government also presented testimony from Collins’s tax preparer, Robert Burch, regarding his interactions with Collins and his business practices. After the government rested its case and Collins indicated she would testify, the government raised its intention to in- quire on cross-examination into details of Collins’s allegedly fraudulent conduct at AIL as probative of her character for untruthfulness. The court, distinguishing this issue from its prior ruling on the government’s second motion, overruled Collins’s objection, and ultimately Collins decided against testifying. As her only witness, Collins offered an expert in forensic accounting. That accountant, Craig Greene, testified to errors in the government’s calculation of Collins’s tax lia- bility and opined that Collins’s failure to file tax returns was due to her own tax preparer’s “negligence.” After deliberations, the jury found Collins guilty of four of the six counts charged. These counts encompassed false state- ments in her tax returns for the 2014 and 2015 calendar years and failure to file a tax return in 2016 both for herself and on behalf of KNC. After trial, the district court denied Collins’s motion for judgment of acquittal. Subsequently, the district court sentenced Collins to one year’s imprisonment and one year of supervised release.

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