Crime & Safety
Woodbridge Contractor Pleads Guilty To Tax Evasion Scheme: Feds
The business owner earned around $20.9 million over a 10-year period, but paid workers in cash and never filed income or payroll tax returns
WOODBRIDGE, CT — A Woodbridge roofing contractor has pleaded guilty in connection with a tax evasion scheme, according to officials.
Anthony Delmaro, 48, waived his right to be indicted and pleaded guilty Tuesday in Hartford federal court to tax evasion, U.S. Attorney for Connecticut David X. Sullivan and Thomas Demeo, Acting Special Agent in Charge of IRS Criminal Investigation in New England, announced in a news release.
According to court documents and statements made in court, since at least 2012, Delmaro has owned and operated a commercial roofing businesses in Connecticut, most frequently doing business as “Kings Roofing.” The business also provided paving services.
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Officials said that until Delmaro was notified of this investigation, Kings Roofing was not registered with the Connecticut Secretary of State and did not have a federal Taxpayer Identification Number.
“From 2012 to 2022, Kings Roofing earned approximately $20.9 million in customer receipts, but Delmaro paid his workers in cash, never filed income or payroll tax returns for himself or the business, and took several steps to conceal income and operating expenses from the IRS,” officials wrote in the news release. “As part of his tax evasion scheme, Delmaro and others associated with his business cashed checks from customers at various check cashing businesses instead of depositing them into bank accounts. Delmaro provided the check cashers with addresses associated with UPS mailboxes rather than his home address. When the check cashers filed Currency Transaction Reports (“CTRs”), the IRS only had a UPS mailbox location to try to identify source of income. When not using a check casher, Delmaro made business-related deposits into his personal bank account.”
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Officials said Delmaro also had customers file “false Forms 1099 made out to a family member, rather than his business, or made out to Delmaro himself, making income attribution more difficult.”
“Delmaro sometimes provided customers with an alias, ‘Sonny Rubino,’ which they used on the 1099,” according to the news release. “If a customer refused to pay unless Delmaro provided a Form W-9 identifying his taxpayer identification number and address, Delmaro often provided a W-9 completed with his father’s name and Social Security number and an address associated with a UPS mailbox. Delmaro’s father used an alias, which differed from the name and information Delmaro provided to the customer.”
For the 2022 tax year, officials said Delmaro cashed $3,710,628 in checks made payable to Kings Roofing at check cashing businesses, received $439,700 in business-related deposits into his personal bank account, and “caused 24 Forms 1099-NEC totaling $1,908,095 to be filed with false information.”
“The investigation also revealed that from 2019 to April 2025, Delmaro received more than $500,000 in Husky Health Low Income Medical benefits,” the news release states. “Husky Health is a Connecticut Medicaid program, jointly funded by the federal government and by the State of Connecticut and administered by the Connecticut Department of Social Services.”
Delmaro has agreed to pay restitution of $1,129,669 to the IRS, and $578,259 to the Connecticut Medicaid program, according to officials.
Delmaro, who was released on a $50,000 bond, is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 17.
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