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Fraude en chapter kodak

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Fraude en chapter kodak
Fraude en chapter kodak
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#242

Re: Fraude en chapter kodak

mucho tiempo sostuve de un fraude en valrizacion de activos de kodak y juez nego a darnos un comite de equidad

pero algo que va jugar en nuestro favor es que si hay una prueba de fraude en valorizacion de activos kodak

lo que tenemos que junatrnos y un abogado reverte todo

preparense para ver que si hay dsentencia firme de valorizacion de los activos kodak para defraudar impuestos con condena penal firme

By The Chronicle-Express

A Yates County native who was serving a 12-year sentence in federal prison -- for defrauding Eastman Kodak Co., the Town of Greece and others -- died May 28 at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas.
John Nicolo was found guilty in May 2009 of 51 counts of fraud and conspiracy, money laundering and tax evasion in a trial that lasted 10 weeks. He was serving his sentence in the low-security federal correctional institution for his role in defrauding Kodak, other Rochester area companies and Greece through an assessment scheme.
Jerry McKinney, a spokesperson for the federal correctional institution, said once Nicolo’s cause of death is determined by the Torrant County Medical Examiner, his remains will be released to his family.
During his trial, prosecutors said Nicolo conspired with retired Greece Assessor Charles Schwab, former Kodak executive David Finnman, and Finnman’s replacement, David Camarata, to scam area companies, including Kodak. Schwab, they claimed, would raise assessments of Kodak property so Finnman and, later, his successor, Camarata, would have the imaging company hire Nicolo to negotiate a lower assessment. Based on the reductions the town assessor made to Kodak Park’s real property tax assessment, Nicolo calculated the tax savings to Kodak over a 15-year period to be $31,527,168. They also calculated Nicolo’s fee from Kodak to be $7,881,798, which was 25 percent of Kodak’s projected tax savings.
Last year, U.S. District Judge David Larimer denied Nicolo’s motion to change his sentence to home confinement.
In his hand-scribed motion, Nicolo described himself an 80-year-old wheelchair-bound inmate who had been improperly cared for medically and had been “physically seriously abused and injured.“
Nicolo accused prison personnel of threatening him, attempting to climb into bed with him, punching him in the groin, refusing medical treatment, and “brutally manhandling” him.
Nicolo’s wife, Constance Roeder, was sentenced to probation following the trial.

a eso sumar william parrret director kodak  lo hes tambien de blackstone y ubs que le apgaron bonos no vencidos apra no pagara a creedores

#243

Re: Fraude en chapter kodak

Hola Ricardo, hace varios años que no miraba como estaba esta cuestión, en mi caso tuve 32.000 acciones que me las robaron estos tipos. Si bien era poco dinero (las compré a centavos) todavía me sigue la sensación de haber sido estafado. Veremos que pasa con el otro caso, espero en algún momento se resuelva esto. Saludos.

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