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Former Manager of a Hawaiʻi ʻukulele Business Sentenced for Failing to File Several Years Worth of General Excise Tax Returns

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Sunday, April 6, 2025

Former Manager of a Hawaiʻi ʻukulele Business Sentenced for Failing to File Several Years Worth of General Excise Tax Returns

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Attorney General Anne E Lopez | National Association of Attorneys General Official Website

On March 5, 2025, Frederick K. Kamaka, Jr., former business manager of Kamaka Hawaiʻi, Inc., pled guilty before Judge Erika Ireland and was granted a deferred plea to six counts of Willful Failure to File Returns, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes Section 231-35. 

For fiscal tax years 2017 to 2022, Frederick K. Kamaka, Jr., was responsible for filing general excise tax (GET) returns, as well as remitting the required GE taxes, to the Department of Taxation on behalf of Kamaka Hawaiʻi, Inc. Based on Mr. Kamaka’s willful failure to file the returns, the total aggregate amount of taxes owed by the company for the six years exceeded $115,000. Willful Failure to File a Return is a misdemeanor offense and carries up to one year imprisonment and a $25,000 fine. Kamaka was granted a deferred plea over the State’s objection, and pursuant to a plea agreement, is required to pay $20,000 to the Department of Taxation, perform 100 hours of community service work, and will be under court supervision for one year.

Following the disposition of Mr. Kamaka’s case, the State dismissed today the criminal case against Kamaka Hawaiʻi, Inc., after the company paid in full the back taxes exceeding $115,000 to the Department of Taxation. The company will still owe civil penalties and interest. The case was investigated by the Hawaiʻi Department of Taxation’s Criminal Investigation Section and prosecuted by Deputy Attorney General David Williams of the Department of the Attorney General’s Criminal Justice Division.

Original source can be found here.

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