FAKE "CAMBODIAN" IN AMERICA 

 

 

LYING DOES NOT PAY RIGHT ?

 

Mail fraud, tax evasion and embezzling $51,000 in Medicare money.




Thursday, June 10, 2010, 11:32 
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បញ្ចេញមតិផ្ទាល់ខ្លួន 

By Katie Mulvaney, Journal Staff Writer
PROVIDENCE — Cheang Chea says he spent five months in a forced labor camp in 
Cambodia in the 1970s as punishment for supporting America.


 
Cheang Chea, owner of a temporary employment agency, who failed to pay millions 
of dollars in federal payroll taxes, at his home in Providence. The Providence 
Journal / Kathy Borchers
 
 
Now, the 73-year-old Cambodian refugee faces up to 35 years in prison in the 
country he fled to after admitting he failed to pay $7 million to $20 million 
in federal withholding taxes for non-English speaking workers he placed in 
manufacturing jobs. 

“I am going to go to jail by America, too,” Chea said Wednesday, standing in 
the doorway of his brick colonial house on Smith Hill.
 
Chea pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court Tuesday to mail fraud, tax evasion 
and embezzling $51,000 in Medicare money. 
 
 
The government estimates that from 2004 to 2008, he underreported — by $17.3 
million to $49.6 million — the wages of the more than 200 workers his firm, S & 
P Help Services Inc., placed in temporary jobs.
 
Prosecutors say Chea supplied temporary workers to about 30 manufacturers in 
Rhode Island and Massachusetts. (Chea places the number at 10.) Jim Martin, a 
spokesman for U.S. Attorney Peter F. Neronha, would not identify the 
businesses, but said Chea’s firm handled the payroll for the temporary 
employees, including paying taxes and covering workers’ compensation insurance.
 
The companies would send S & P a check to cover the employees’ pay, and, in 
some cases, Chea would cash checks of more than $200,000, Martin said. Chea 
paid most of the employees in cash, he said. He declined to say whether Chea 
paid the workers appropriate wages.
 
A Buddhist, Chea says he was trying to help poor people, many of whom did not 
speak English and came from Cambodia, Laos, China and Spanish-speaking 
countries. 
 
Contrary to the government’s assertions that some were illegal immigrants, Chea 
says the workers he found jobs for out of offices in Providence and Attleboro 
are here legally. A spokesman for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement 
would not comment on the case.
 
 
“I try to help people,” said Chea, who shared bits of his story on the front 
stoop of his 150 Home Ave. house as a light rain fell on his well-kept lawn and 
a black Mercedes sedan sat in his garage. He told of becoming emaciated during 
his months in the labor camp and of people being publicly executed for stealing 
fruit. He was among 2 workers out of 13 working for a hydroelectric plant not 
to be executed by the Khmer Rouge, he said. 
 
He fled Cambodia in 1979, arriving in the United States as a refugee two years 
later.
News of Chea’s guilty plea shocked the immigrant community Wednesday, where he 
was known as a generous man who donated money to Buddhist temples in Rhode 
Island, as well as large sums to build a hospital in Cambodia. He gave money to 
friends in need.
“He was helping rebuild Cambodia is what he’s doing, and helping get people 
jobs here,” said Molly Soum, former president of the Cambodian Society of Rhode 
Island. “He has given a lot of jobs to people in the community.”
Chea secured assembly-line jobs in jewelry manufacturing and as machinists, 
Soum said. They were often paid $5, $6 and $7 an hour, she said. (The state 
minimum wage is $7.40.)
“They do whatever … as long as they have food,” Soum said. It is sad, she said, 
to hear Chea is facing prison time, but equally disappointed that he paid 
people low wages.
She speculated that his crimes might have been preventable. “People from our 
country don’t take taxes seriously,” she said.
For his part, Chea seems resigned to the fact that he will do jail time, but he 
says it won’t compare to his months in prison in Cambodia. He plans to keep 
running his business until he is sentenced in October.
 
 
 
BE                                        
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