Friday Dec 9 2022
Tulsa King version
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jYVAmOlUvI
Elon Musk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8QY0NDWqzk
Accounting & Investing Info for San Antonio A & M
Friday Dec 9 2022
Tulsa King version
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jYVAmOlUvI
Elon Musk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8QY0NDWqzk
Thursday Dec 8 2022
Griner released in exchange for Soviet Arms Dealer Viktor Boput.
Paul Whelan remains locked in a Soviet Prison
Tuesday Dec 6, 2022
after thirty years employment, this Church Book keeper bbegan stealing in 2014.
the final tally really added up
be on the look for stealth female book keepers who no one suspects
Tuesday Dec 5 2022
Disgraced former celebrity lawyer Michael Avenatti was sentenced Monday in a California federal court to 14 years in prison for stealing millions of dollars from four former clients.
U.S. District Judge James Selna handed down the sentence to Mr. Avenatti, who earlier this year pleaded guilty to four counts of wire fraud and one count of obstructing the Internal Revenue Service.
Federal prosecutors said Mr. Avenatti, 51 years old, lied to his former clients about settlement agreements he had negotiated for them and secretly spent some of the proceeds. He also obstructed the IRS’s efforts to collect more than $3 million in payroll taxes from a coffee business he owned, prosecutors said.
Judge Selna ordered Mr. Avenatti to pay nearly $11 million in restitution to the former clients and the IRS.
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“Michael Avenatti was a corrupt lawyer who claimed he was fighting for the little guy,” said Martin Estrada, the U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, whose office prosecuted the case. “In fact, he only cared about his own selfish interests.”
A lawyer for Mr. Avenatti said he planned to appeal the sentence. “The sentence imposed today was deeply disappointing and off-the-charts harsh,” the lawyer, H. Dean Steward, said in a statement.
Mr. Avenatti is already serving a combined five-year term in prison for two separate felony convictions in Manhattan federal court, including for stealing $300,000 from adult-film actress Stormy Daniels. He represented Ms. Daniels in battles with former President Donald Trump. The 14-year sentence will run consecutively with the five-year term.
Ahead of Monday’s sentencing, Mr. Avenatti asked Judge Selna for a sentence of no more than six years in prison to be served concurrently with the previous sentences.
Federal prosecutors had sought a prison term of 17 and a half years to be served consecutively with the previous sentences.
The “defendant’s scheme to defraud his clients was cruel—often reducing those clients to begging for needed funds,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing.
Mr. Avenatti pleaded guilty to some of the charges in the California embezzlement case after a judge declared a mistrial in 2021.
Separately, he was convicted in a Manhattan federal court in February of defrauding Ms. Daniels out of book advance payments. In another trial, he was convicted in 2020 of three felonies for his failed efforts to extort Nike Inc.
Write to James Fanelli at james.fanelli@wsj.com
Monday Dec 5 2022
Internship/employment available
Anastasia Nunn, CPA
ALN Accounting Services, PLLC phone: 210-294-9730 email: info@alnaccounting.com website: http://www.alnaccounting.com Facebook: @alnaccountingservices
This work would be seasonal tax work. If interested send your resume to this email address:
info@alnaccounting.com
In the subject line write “Internship” (don’t include the quote marks).
In the body of the message introduce yourself as a student at Texas A&M – San Antonio, note that you heard about the position from your instructor and include your contact information. Then attach your resume, being sure to include your contact information on the resu
Weekend Ce 3 2022
Friday Dec 2 2022
We bought a table and had eight students at Blue Santa Luncheon. This event raises toys for underprivileged kids.
Renee Foshee, former President SA CPA and one time adjunct at TAMUSA and Will Holisky, TAMUSA grad and named one of the Outstanding Young CPAs in Texas
The gang is all here, eight TAMUSA students in attendance.
Brandon Howard at left, student outreach at SA TXCPA and tax lecturer at UTSA.
AtAt right, /Ed Plansky and an SA Poliice Officer. Ed is a former state wide TXCPA President. He is the author of a series of
Children's books about Oscar the Osprey.
Fred Timmons at left another former TXCPA statewide President and friend or our campus.
Right Omar Garcia current TAMUSA student and Amanda Selby TAMUSA grad and HOLT CAT intern visit during the event.
Friday Dec 2 2022
SAN ANTONIO — San Antonio businessman Sergio Soto Jr. started iPhone Buyerz and Phone Dropz to sell used cellphones in bulk.
There was one problem: Soto didn’t always have phones to sell.
That tiny detail didn’t stop him from scamming prospective cellphone buyers in the U.S. and Mexico out of nearly $1 million.
This week, U.S. District Judge Jason Pulliam sentenced Soto to 44 months in prison after he pleaded guilty to four counts of wire fraud. As part of his plea, Soto agreed to make full restitution of $990,690. He also must serve three years of supervised release.
Guillermo Lara Jr., Soto’s lawyer, said a gambling addiction turned his client’s life upside down.
“Ambition drives the human soul and a man’s worth is no greater than the worth of his ambition,” Lara said in an email Thursday. “Unfortunately, Mr. Soto made poor decisions because of his desires to be successful. He didn’t count on his addiction to gambling to push him to the breaking point.”
Soto will do “everything in his power to correct the wrong he has done,” Lara added.
“This individual took advantage of unsuspecting victims and lined his pockets at their expense,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Oliver E. Rich Jr. in San Antonio said in a statement.
Charging documents filed along with Soto’s plea agreement in May show he operated the scheme from May 2020 through October 2020. Soto conducted “mass advertising” via Facebook Marketplace and other social media sites promising to deliver bulk cellphone orders, the plea agreement said.
“Soto did not possess or otherwise have access to bulk quantities of cellphones to fulfill orders placed with iPhone Buyerz and/or Phone Dropz,” the document added.
The plea agreement said Soto entered the wholesale cellphone business to buy them in “lots” of 20 or 30 phones from a San Antonio company that recycles phones.
But after Soto failed to complete several wholesale purchase orders by a person identified as “C.W.” (cooperating witness) in the summer of 2020, the recycler stopped supplying phones to Soto. The witness was a business acquaintance of the recycler’s owner.
Despite being “disconnected” from his supplier, the plea said, Soto continued to market to potential customers.
One victim, a Mexican businessman based in Leon, Guanajuato, agreed to buy 200 iPhones for $46,750. The buyer primarily paid cash but Soto never fulfilled the order.
A victim in Nazareth, Penn., placed $1.3 million worth of orders. Soto told the buyer he had access to cellphones at auctions and had phones on hand. He sent the victim invoices that listed the number of phones set to be shipped.
The victim wired almost $1.3 million to Soto’s bank account before discovering Soto was not shipping all of the phones, the plea agreement stated. The buyer ordered 5,144 iPhones of varying models, but only received 1,050 phones — valued at about $366,500.
Another buyer, an American who lives in Colonia Independencia, Guadalajara, agreed to buy 30 iPhone 11s for $555 each. He wired $16,650 from his bank account to Soto’s but never received any phones.
In total, Soto received just under $1.4 million in payments from the three buyers but only delivered about $366,500 worth of phones.
“The growing trend towards significant on-line purchases has greatly increased the problem of wire fraud, both in the United States and internationally, said U.S. Attorney Ashley C. Hoff, the top federal prosecutor in the Western District of Texas.
pdanner@express-news.net
Friday Dec 2 2022
It is my impression we’re making more psychopaths. I can’t back this up with statistics because doctors don’t write “total psycho” on the diagnosis line. Psychopathy isn’t a diagnostic category and is largely viewed as part of a cluster of antisocial personality disorders. But doctors commonly use the term and it has defined characteristics. The American Psychological Association calls it a chronic disposition to disregard the rights of others. Manifestations include a tendency to exploit, to be deceitful, to disregard norms and laws, to be impulsive and reckless, and, most important, to lack guilt, remorse and empathy. The APA has reported 15% to 25% of prison inmates show characteristics of psychopathology, far more than in the general adult population.
But that’s where I see growth. Subtle psychopaths, the kind who don’t stab you, are often intelligent, charming and accomplished. I believe two are currently in the news. (I confine myself to the business sphere, leaving out the equally rich field of politics.)
Elizabeth Holmes was just sentenced to 11 years in federal prison for defrauding investors in her famous Theranos scam. People used to ask why she did it. By now that’s clear. She did it to be important. She wanted to be admired. She wished to be thought a genius, a pioneer. She no doubt wanted money, though part of her con was to live relatively modestly—she wore the same black turtleneck and trousers most days. She wanted status, then and now as Tom Wolfe said the great subject of American life. And she seemed to think she deserved these things—that she merited them, simply by walking in. One thing you pick up as you read John Carreyrou’s great reporting, in these pages and his book, is that she seemed not at all concerned with the negative effects of her actions on others. She didn’t seem to care that investors lost hundreds of millions, people lost jobs, the great men she invited on her board were humiliated.
Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency-trading firm, FTX, collapsed last month. We’re still in the why-did-he-do-it phase—Was it deliberate deception? Untidy bookkeeping? Visionaries often leave the details to others! We make mysteries where there aren’t any. He had a great life while it worked! He made himself famous, rich, admired—friend of presidents and prime ministers, the darling of a major political party. To the Democrats he was the biggest thing since George Soros.
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But somehow a valuation of $32 billion was, in a matter of weeks, turned into, or revealed as, nothing. FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, and FTX’s new CEO, John Ray, said he believed gross negligence was involved and a “substantial portion” of FTX customers’ assets may be “missing or stolen.” Soon after, the crypto firm BlockFi filed for bankruptcy in New Jersey and Bermuda.
A peculiarity of subtle psychopaths is that while they don’t seem to feel shame, they are preoccupied with being thought of as highly moral. Ms. Holmes was simply trying to help sick people get their blood tested more easily. This was part of her origin myth—a relative’s illness made her sensitive to the needs of the suffering. Mr. Bankman-Fried gave away millions and became the public face of a movement called effective altruism. He was just trying to help the less fortunate live better lives! And he was so modest about it, eschewing material things, clad in rough sandals, a thin T-shirt, shorts. Like the young St. Francis, stripping himself naked that his robes might be sold for the poor.
I don’t know if Elon Musk fits in this category. I hope he’s an eccentric genius with a moral core and not a psychopath. We’ll find out! It’s good he’s in space. His buying Twitter has excited lots of people, frightened others. If he merely changes that public square from an entity of the left to an open entity, good. We’ll see how content moderation goes. But many conservatives see him as a kind of savior. Is he? Saviors by definition save others.
Does he strike you as preoccupied by the needs of other people? Evince an old-fashioned interest in the public weal? He offers to buy the site, changes his mind, tries to back out, is forced to honor his agreement, takes over. In the ensuing chaos he tweets out memes of a whore tempting a monk, to illustrate, strangely, his invitation to Donald Trump to rejoin the site. He tweets out photos of his bedside table—two life-size handgun replicas and scattered cans of Diet Coke. It looked as if a school shooter lived there.
“He stands for free speech.” Mr. Bankman-Fried stood for selflessness and “responsible” regulation of crypto. Ms. Holmes stood for thinking outside the box and breaking through false limits. They all believe in something.
My fear with Mr. Musk is that if a scientific paper came out saying eating baby parts will add half a century to your life, he’d tweet: We can grow the babies in discarded ship containers and eat them—for the squeamish, God didn’t make them, I did so there’s no soul or anything.
But again, most interesting in psychopaths is the lack of remorse. They don’t like being caught—that upsets them—but they don’t mind causing others harm. It’s their superpower. They’re not hemmed in by what limits you.
Which is a conscience. People often refer to their consciences—they say things like “My conscience is clear.” It’s not an unknown entity to them. But they seem to think it’s something they were born with, like a sense of smell. When actually a conscience has to be formed and developed or it doesn’t work.
Every major faith in the world has thoughts here. In Catholic teaching, says Father Roger Landry, Columbia University’s Catholic chaplain, the traditional definition of conscience is “a judgment of the practical reason applying moral principles to concrete circumstances leading to the conclusion to do or not do something.”
“Many people today confuse their conscience with their opinion or even with their feelings about what is the right thing to do or avoid,” he said in an email. “Many think that if their intentions were good, and they desired a good outcome, then the action would be morally fine. But, as is obvious, sometimes we will feel good about doing something wrong (‘I stole, but he was rich’; ‘I insulted her, but she deserved it.’)” A conscience must be informed “with the truth that comes from God—the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes, corporal and spiritual works of mercy, other passages in Sacred Scripture, the moral teachings of the Church.” These things “illumine our eyes so that we may see things more clearly.”
“Conscience can make erroneous judgments, either because it identifies wrong principles (e.g., personal autonomy as the supreme value), or has the right principles in a disordered rank (prioritizing not hurting others’ feelings over helping the person give up drugs.)” But to form a conscience we have a duty “to tune into God’s frequency rather than our own echo chamber, or the confused noise that can come from culture.”