Medical Execs Plead Guilty to Using Tax Money to Buy Sharks Tickets

They also bought country club memberships.

Transcript

A pair of California executives have pleaded guilty to failing to pay millions in employment taxes to the IRS. Instead, they bought season tickets to the NHL's San Jose Sharks and country club memberships.

According to the Department of Justice, Lalo Valdez and Matthew Olson operate a San Jose-based product development and health informatics company that offers clinical care and technology services to clients in healthcare and academia. 

From Q1 2017 through the second quarter of 2021, Valdez and Olson allegedly withheld taxes from employee wages but didn't pay the IRS or report them on quarterly tax forms. During that time, according to LinkedIn, both worked for Stella Technology, which is based in Milpitas, a San Jose suburb. Stella specializes in healthcare technology services, primarily custom software development. According to their LinkedIn profiles, both Valdez and Olsen still work for Stella. 

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From 2017 to 2021, both Valdez and Olson were responsible for Stella's operations, including managing the books, signing checks, and hiring and firing employees. Both were responsible for withholding Social Security, Medicare, and federal income taxes from employee wages and paying those funds to the government each quarter. 

In a press release, the Justice Department stressed that the timely payment of quarterly employment taxes is critical to the U.S. government functioning—they are a primary source of funding. 

During the same period referenced, Olson also owned a day spa in Saratoga and, from Q2 2017 through the fourth quarter of 2020, he collected but failed to pay or report employee taxes.

Olson caused a tax loss exceeding $2.1 million, and Valdez caused a total tax loss to the IRS of some $1.5 million.

Valdez and Olson are scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 20. Both face a max penalty of five years in prison as well as supervised release, restitution, and other monetary penalties. We reached out to Stella Technology, but the company didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

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