Crime & Safety

Man Captured, Sentenced For Laundering $1M Worth Of IRS Checks

The checks were based on fraudulent tax returns with false W-2 information, using the name and info of someone in Puerto Rico.

(File photo by Jenna Fisher/Patch Staff)

BOSTON — A Dominican national was sentenced Wednesday in federal court in Boston for laundering close to $1 million in fraudulently obtained IRS refund checks using 11 different bank accounts at five different banks, according to the U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling's office.

Francisco Oscar “Frank” Grullon, 52, formerly of Andover, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Leo T. Sorokin to about seven years in prison and ordered to pay restitution of $1.6 million. Grullon will face deportation proceedings following the completion of his sentence.

In April Grullon was convicted, following a six-day jury trial, of one count of conspiracy, 15 counts of theft or conversion of United States property and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. Grullon was arrested in the Dominican Republic and extradited to the United States in 2018.

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Grullon conspired with Medford attorney R. David Cohen, who, in 2016, was convicted for his role in the scheme, to deposit and launder over 100 fraudulently obtained tax refund checks. The checks were based on fraudulent tax returns with false W-2 information, usually using the name and Social Security number of a resident of Puerto Rico, where residents are not required to file federal income tax returns. Once the fraudulent returns were accepted by the IRS, refund checks were sent to addresses in Lawrence, East Boston and New York.

From October 2011 until November 2013, Grullon and his co-conspirators obtained and negotiated more than $1.6 million in fraudulent checks, including nearly $1 million in checks that were the product of fraudulent tax refunds. Grullon and his co-conspirators deposited the checks into bank accounts in the name of a front company, AD Professional Association Inc., and in co-conspirator Cohen’s attorney client trust accounts.

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When questioned by bank officials about the suspicious quantity of U.S. Treasury checks, Grullon falsely claimed that he was depositing them as a favor for friends and that he had a check-cashing license.

Later, after their bank accounts were closed by several banks, Grullon and Cohen recruited a third co-conspirator and directed him to open accounts for AD Professional Association Inc., deposit more than $500,000 in treasury checks, and make hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash withdrawals.

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