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Sacramento man faces years behind bars after jury finds he fabricated income and withholdings to exploit tax system for personal gain

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Sacramento, California – A former Sacramento resident will spend more than four years behind bars after a federal court found he had deliberately manipulated the tax system in an effort to secure a massive, unearned payout.

Christopher Eugene Guilford, 54, was sentenced to four years and three months in prison after being convicted of submitting false claims to the United States and filing fraudulent tax returns. The sentence follows a jury verdict delivered on October 30, 2025, which found him guilty on one count of making a false claim and eight additional counts tied to falsified tax filings.

According to federal authorities, Guilford submitted nine tax returns that contained fabricated financial details. In those filings, he reported income that did not exist and listed tax withholdings that were never made. The scheme was not minor in scale. In one instance alone, he succeeded in obtaining a refund totaling $1,172,446, money prosecutors say he was never entitled to receive.

Officials described the case as an example of a broader pattern tied to a fringe tactic often referred to as a “redemption” scheme. The approach, commonly associated with tax protest movements and so-called sovereign citizen theories, has been repeatedly dismissed by courts across the country. Despite that, it continues to surface in cases where individuals attempt to exploit perceived loopholes in the tax system.

U.S. Attorney Eric Grant addressed the outcome in direct terms, emphasizing that falsifying tax information is far from a harmless act. He noted that the defendant’s actions were not only illegal but also a calculated attempt to extract more than $1.17 million from public funds. The sentence, he said, reflects a clear message: abusing the tax system for personal gain carries serious consequences.

Investigators with IRS Criminal Investigation traced Guilford’s actions back to the deliberate creation of false records designed to support his claims. By inventing income figures and inflating withholding amounts, authorities said, he constructed a narrative that would trigger large refunds. In reality, those figures had no legitimate basis.

Linda Nguyen, Special Agent in Charge of the IRS Criminal Investigation Oakland Field Office, said the case highlights the damage such schemes can cause. She pointed out that fraudulent filings not only break federal law but also erode trust in systems meant to serve taxpayers honestly. Efforts like these, she added, divert resources and undermine confidence in programs designed to function fairly.

The investigation was led by IRS Criminal Investigation, with prosecution handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brittany M. Gunter and Arelis M. Clemente. Their work brought the case from complex financial filings to a courtroom verdict and, ultimately, to sentencing.

The outcome closes a chapter on a scheme that sought to turn deception into profit. Instead, it ends with a prison term, reinforcing a familiar but firm principle: the tax system relies on accuracy and honesty, and when that foundation is deliberately shaken, the consequences are not far behind.

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