Former employees of the troubled Verona Hotel are looking for their old boss - and they hope they find him before tax season ends.

They lost their jobs when Verona Resort owner David Su closed the property last year - and they tell KUAM they need their W2's. While they say they can't find Su or even get a hold of him, Su tells KUAM the abandoned hotel was burglarized, and the burglars damaged computers that had the former workers' tax documents in them.

But Cathy Salenga isn't buying it. Salenga organized Verona workers last year and led them to file labor complaints because Su wasn't paying them on time.

"I don't believe him," she told KUAM News. "Probably he's hiding because I saw his car in Agana Heights. We just need the W2's - that's all."

Su told KUAM in a Whatsapp message the abandoned hotel's office was burglarized but he's having the W2's "reconstructed" and his old workers will "definitely" have the documents the need to file their taxes before April 15.

Meanwhile, Salenga said she reached out to Department of Labor on behalf of her old coworkers, and she says she was told it wasn't a DOL issue.

KUAM files show police have arrested several people over the last year for stealing from the abandoned property. Files also show the Guam Environmental Protection Agency has had trouble locating Su to issue him a Notice of Violation for his unattended properties. Just this week, KUAM reported Guam EPA did serve the NOV to Su via e-mail.