Central District of California | Former CEO of Hollywood Payroll . . . Visconti was convicted by a federal jury in October of tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the IRS, and filing a false tax return Axium was one of the largest payroll services companies serving the entertainment industry, and its client list included studios, Fortune 500 companies and broadcasters
Central District of California | Former CEO of Hollywood Payroll . . . RIVERSIDE, California – The former CEO of Axium International, Inc , a leading Hollywood payroll services company until its 2008 collapse, was convicted late yesterday afternoon of tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the IRS, and filing a false tax return
Payroll Processing CEO Convicted of Tax Fraud - Klasing Associates John Visconti, 71, is the former and once high-flying CEO of a Hollywood payroll processing company known as Axium The company provided payroll services to many of Hollywood’s prominent entertainment and media companies
Former CEO of Hollywood Payroll Company Sentenced to Two Years in . . . Visconti was convicted by a federal jury in October of tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the IRS, and filing a false tax return Axium was one of the largest payroll services companies serving the entertainment industry, and its client list included studios, Fortune 500 companies and broadcasters
Hollywood Payroll Firm Owner Convicted on Tax Evasion Last week, Axium’s majority owner was convicted of several tax crimes, including tax evasion According to a Department of Justice press release, John Visconti, 74, of Beverly Hills, was convicted by a federal jury on counts ranging from tax evasion, to filing a false tax return, to conspiracy
Axium International CEO John Visconti Convicted of Tax Fraud John Visconti, former chief executive of Axium International Inc , was convicted on Tuesday of tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service, and filing a false tax return
Ex-CEO of Payroll Co. Axium Gets Two Years for $5. 1M Fraud Judge Jesus G Bernal sentenced John Visconti, who also allegedly failed to repay $1 9 million in corporate loans, to two years’ imprisonment and ordered him to pay $1 75 million in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service