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Strip club executives allegedly bribed tax auditor with lap dances and luxury trips to slash tax bills

Strip club executives allegedly bribed New York tax auditor with cash, luxury trips and lap dances to avoid $8 million in taxes, according to sweeping indictment.

A group of strip club executives allegedly bribed a New York state tax auditor with cash, luxury Florida trips and lap dances worth thousands of dollars a day to slash millions from their tax bills, according to a sweeping indictment by Attorney General Letitia James.

The 79-count indictment accuses top leaders of RCI Hospitality Holdings Inc., the Texas-based parent company behind strip clubs Rick’s Cabaret, Vivid Cabaret and Hoops Cabaret, of using their venues to disguise bribes as “promotional” expenses and avoid more than $8 million in sales taxes between 2010 and 2024.

Prosecutors say the auditor received at least 13 all-expenses-paid trips to Florida, where the company’s top leadership was allegedly given hotel rooms, restaurant meals and up to $5,000 per day for private dances at RCI-owned clubs.


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Federal defense attorney Ronald Chapman II said the allegations, while “sensational,” may not prove criminal intent once tested in court.

“When you look a little deeper, things start to look a little bit different,” Chapman told Fox News Digital. “This case reminds me of the [President] Trump financial-fraud case, where prosecutors in New York built a sweeping narrative around business judgments that may not actually violate the law.”

Chapman said prosecutors face an uphill battle to prove a quid pro quo and that the auditor’s decisions were directly influenced by the perks.

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“It only turns into bribery when that is also done consistent with bad conduct, looking the other way on something,” he said. “I just don’t see that other side of the quid pro quo yet.”

READ THE INDICTMENT – APP USERS, CLICK HERE

He also questioned the timing of the charges, pointing to the embattled attorney general.

“We see, once again, a very late indictment being brought. That means somebody brought this case from a pile of cases and decided to pluck it out,” he said.

“Oftentimes we will see prosecutors right around the time they’re about to be facing re-election, trying to bring big cases like this with sensational headlines where they don’t really have the goods to fully handle the prosecution,” he said.

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James is facing one count of bank fraud and one count of making false statements to a financial institution. The allegations stem from a home she purchased in 2020 in Norfolk, Virginia.

Prosecutors say James misrepresented the property as a secondary residence on loan/mortgage documents, when in fact they allege she used it as a rental investment property, which qualified her for more favorable loan terms. She has pleaded not guilty.

The indictment, filed in New York County Supreme Court, names RCI Chief Executive Officer Eric Langan, Controller Timothy Winata, Chief Financial Officer Bradley Chhay, Operations Director Ahmed “Ed” Anakar, and Nightclub Operations Director Shaun Kevlin as defendants. A sixth individual has also been charged but was not identified because of the sealed indictment.

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RCI and its three Manhattan-based clubs, Rick’s Cabaret, Vivid Cabaret and Hoops Cabaret and Sports Bar, are also charged in the case, which includes counts of criminal tax fraud, bribery, conspiracy and filing false business records.

If convicted of the top counts, Langan, Winata and Anakar could each face up to 25 years in prison, while Chhay and Kevlin could face a maximum of 15 years.

James described the case as a blatant abuse of power by a publicly traded company seeking to skirt its tax obligations.

“RCI’s executives shamelessly used their strip clubs to bribe their way out of paying millions of dollars in taxes,” James said in a statement announcing the indictment. “I will always take action to fight corruption and ensure everyone pays their fair share.”

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