
Revenu Québec, which does not really handle questions of cheating on exams, has instead charged him with tax fraud, accusing him of submitting false tax returns by not declaring his income and, at the same time, of not remitting any taxes resulting from his commercial activities. He could then see the questions from a distance and give his clients the answers. The 60-year-old sold his driving test cheating services to people on whom he installed a camera, and gave them an earpiece. Tran, whose sentence was handed down last April and announced on Thursday by Revenu Québec, had created his own small business to cheat on driving theory exams. Revenue Quebec announced Thursday that 60-year-old Alex Tran of Laval has been given a conditional sentence of two years less a day, with fines totalling just over $227,000 in connection with a tax fraud case.



Cheating can have unfortunate consequences, but a Laval resident just learned the hard way that getting paid to help others cheat will cost him dearly.
