Exclusive | Comedian Carlos Mencia brushes off alleged $8.7M tax dodge with brazen seven-word statement

Comedian Carlos Mencia isn’t shying away from his tax mistakes, getting very blunt with The California Post on exactly what led to his multimillion-dollar case.“All I did was not pay my taxes,” the comedian, facing 12 felonies connected to his more than $8 million in alleged tax fraud, told The Post as he left an LA courthouse Tuesday.“Being arrested, the guns, that was a very shocking thing.I was compared to Al Capone, all I did was not pay taxes.
I never cheated on them, I never got paid in cash, I never didn’t sign a 1099.How much money I made will come out because I never hid that,” he added.Mencia, wearing a University of Oregon jacket and a t-shirt emblazoned with the words “Super Funny,” was joined by his wife and attorney Dana Cole.
Cole argued the comedian should be able to list his LA estate in order to help pay his over $300,000 tax bill.Cole also attempted to unfreeze assets from Mencia’s CitiBank account so he could pay living expenses and his attorney fees as they continue to fight the multiple charges against him for allegedly not paying tax on $8.7 million in earnings.Judge Alicia Blanco ruled Mencia could list his Encino mansion, believed to be valued at over $4.5 million.
The judge also allowed for $100,000 to be taken from the bank account. “At the end of the day we are going to take care of this.It’s how we got there that’s a little painful from a psychological and physical standpoint.
They got what they wanted, they got the attention to this issue from me, so it is what it is,” Mencia told The Post.Mencia was the first arrest related to DA Nathan Hochman’s newly formed Business Tax Fraud Unit last month.Mencia allegedly failed to file taxes from 2019 to 2024.
The California Franchise Tax Board allegedly mailed 78 demand notices to his residence.Investigators descended on Mencia’s property in the bust — hauling out boxes, sealed cases, and bags of electronics and evidence tied to the sweeping tax fraud inves...