BOSTON Within a short time of receiving several hundred thousand dollars from investors for his start-up app company SnoOwl, Jasiel Correia II spent more than half the money on travel, entertainment, luxury items and paying off personal debt.
Correia then attempted to hide those personal expenditures as business expenditures on his tax returns. He also hid from the IRS the fact that SnoOwl, a partnership, even existed, according to testimony Friday.
That was the gist of the government’s case on Friday against the former Fall River mayor, with the majority of the day’s testimony from IRS criminal investigator Sandi Lemanski, of the agency’s public corruption unit. Lemanski testified that over the course of three years, investors gave Correia a total of $358,190, but he wasted little time spending the money on personal use.
MASK MANDATE relief — EVERETT MAYORAL RACE rumblings — BACK to high school in MAY
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Live updates from trial of former Fall River mayor Jasiel Correia
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U.S. District Court Judge Douglas P. Woodlock will be presiding over the proceedings in Courtroom 1.
Correia faces a total of 24 counts, including tax fraud in relation to his app company, SnoOwl, and extortion and bribery charges in relation to an alleged pay-to-play scheme he created with marijuana vendors looking to do business in Fall River. Four days were set aside last week for jury selection, though that still needs to be completed today. Opening statements began today as well.
Dr. David Cabeceiras takes the stand
The prosecution, specifically David Tobin today, is very precise in its questioning. Many documents and time-stamped emails have been presented, and almost each time, witnesses are asked to first testify if the documents are authentic.
Any parents of a 16-year-old knows it can be hard to find moments when they truly enjoy family time. Go for a family hike, and you re met with sour faces. Invite them out to a family dinner, and inevitably they hate that restaurant.
It s fine. Being a teenager is rough.
Enter the Marvel universe. You know, Iron Man and the Avengers and all that. I ve never been a fan movies with superheroes, imaginary people, aliens, stuff blowing up just aren t my thing.
It is absolutely my husband s thing, and my son s thing.
One Friday in January I wandered into the family room and plopped myself on the couch, fully exhausted from a long week at work. I was so tired I didn t really care what Greg was watching.