

Wesley Snipes: The actor ran into trouble in 2006 when the government accused Snipes of failing to file tax returns for the years 1999 through 2004. He pleaded not guilty by saying he is not actually required to pay taxes. Snipes trial begins January 14, 2008. If convicted, Snipes could face up to 16 years in prison and hefty fines. Not guilty of fraud a felony but guilty of failure to file 3 years.
Richard Hatch: Famous for being the first winner of the popular reality TV show 'Survivor,' Hatch neglected to pay taxes on his $1 million grand prize. The Rhode Island native was convicted in 2006 of tax evasion and sentenced to 51 months in prison, plus three years of supervised release after serving his sentence.
Sophia Loren: The Academy Award winning Italian actress and beauty made headlines in 1982 when she served an 18-day sentence for tax evasion in an Italian prison.
Leona Helmsley: After claiming some $2.6 million worth of phony business expenses, the 'Queen of Mean' was found guilty of tax fraud in 1992 and spent four years in prison. At her trial, one witness testified that Helmsley had boasted: "We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes."
Marc Anthony: Jennifer Lopez's husband and latin singing superstar Marc Anthony agreed to pay $2.5 million in back taxes, interest and penalties for his failure to file returns for five years between 2000 and 2004. Anthony was not prosecuted because he thought his accountant had filed them.
Luciano Pavarotti: The world-famous Italian opera singer was twice the subject of a tax investigation and accused of tax evasion: once in 1999 and again in 2001. The second time he was acquitted, but in '99, he did have to pay nearly $11 million to the Italian government.
Jeter Settles Tax Flap
New York Yankees captain Derek Jeter has reportedly settled his tax problems with the State of New York.
Tax investigators probed last year whether he owed back taxes from tax years 2001 to 2003, disputing Jeter's claim that he was a resident of Florida, not New York, at the time. Florida has no income tax.
Jeter has owned a $13 million apartment in New York's Trump World Tower since October 2001, but claims that Tampa has been his legal residence since 1994. Under Jeter's contract with the Yankees, he received $38 million over the three-year period, not counting his signing bonus, according to the Associated Press.
How much Jeter paid to settle the case with New York's Department of Taxation and Finance is unknown.
Jeter Settles Tax Flap
New York Yankees captain Derek Jeter has reportedly settled his tax problems with the State of New York.
Tax investigators probed last year whether he owed back taxes from tax years 2001 to 2003, disputing Jeter's claim that he was a resident of Florida, not New York, at the time. Florida has no income tax.
Jeter has owned a $13 million apartment in New York's Trump World Tower since October 2001, but claims that Tampa has been his legal residence since 1994. Under Jeter's contract with the Yankees, he received $38 million over the three-year period, not counting his signing bonus, according to the Associated Press.
Nicolas Cage
The Academy Award-winning actor used his company, Saturn Productions, "to wrongly write off $3.3 million in personal expenses," reports Forbes.
Cage's business manager says the spending, which included "limos, meals, gifts, travel" and a Gulfstream jet, are all "security needs." Cage has gone to tax court to dispute $814,000 in taxes and penalties.