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HMRC Heavies knocking at my door

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    #21
    Originally posted by why View Post
    Is this a first for HMRC?

    Can they now check out IoM...(probably not)
    It's an entirely separate revenue system, so I'd say their powers would be limited

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      #22
      It will certainly put the "willy's up'em", this will soon start to get around that lot. I hope some are sweating.

      Maybe Mods should sticky that press release?

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
        I just so want this to be any well-known scheme promoter getting it in the neck.
        It's not - none of the people arrested match his company house details...
        merely at clientco for the entertainment

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by why View Post
          Is this a first for HMRC?

          Can they now check out IoM...(probably not)
          It appears to be already happening and has been for some time.

          2011 Police raid Isle of Man tax firm offices in fraud case | International Adviser (although it didn't end well for HMRC)

          2013 Isle of Man Government - National Insurance warning to employment businesses

          2016 Isle of Man Judgments Online

          There appears to be regular cross working between the IOM and UK authorities - although we can never know for sure until its revealed in a Court case on either side of the Irish Sea.

          Comment


            #25
            Also last year:

            HMRC makes six loan charge arrests
            UK tax authority swoops on promoters of ‘fraudulent’ schemes

            Kate Beioley in London May 17 2019

            The UK tax authority has arrested five men and a woman for promoting fraudulent schemes designed to evade paying the loan charge, in its most serious intervention over the controversial levy.

            HM Revenue & Customs said it arrested two individuals on May 10 on suspicion of promoting a scheme “designed to get around the loan charge, allowing individuals to evade paying taxes”.

            In a separate criminal investigation, on Tuesday four other people were arrested on suspicion of “using fraudulent methods to circumvent the loan charge and the taxes due” and are “suspected of enabling others to do the same”.

            All six have been released pending investigation.

            Announced in 2016, the loan charge cracked down on loan-based tax avoidance schemes used by tens of thousands of contractors, which HMRC regards as “disguised remuneration” to reduce income tax and national insurance contributions.

            People were given until April 2019 to either settle with HMRC, repay the loans or face paying tax on up to 20 years of income in a single tax year. Many are facing six-figure tax bills and fear bankruptcy.

            HMRC warned two years ago that some promoters claimed to have created schemes that enabled users to get out of the loan arrangements and avoid the loan charge, in return for a fee.

            One example highlighted by the tax authority involved promoters asking individuals to enter into a “bet” with the trust that granted them the loan. The terms of the bet meant the individual was almost certain to win, using the winnings to repay the loan. The tax authority stressed on Friday that such schemes did not work, and that tax evasion was illegal.

            “We strongly encourage people not to use loan-busting schemes and methods,” an HMRC spokesman said. “They clearly don’t work and people run the risk of losing more money and being involved in fraud. As we always say — if it looks too good to be true, then it undoubtedly is.”

            The arrested include a 54-year-old man from Guildford, a 58-year-old man from Stevenage, a 50-year-old man from Stratford-upon-Avon, a 78-year-old man from south London, a 45-year-old woman from Tonbridge and a 50-year-old man from Sevenoaks.

            HMRC officers also seized personal records from business and residential properties in London, Guildford, Stevenage, Stratford-upon-Avon, Sevenoaks and Tonbridge, it said.

            The interventions are the latest action in HMRC’s investigation of fraud related to disguised remuneration schemes.


            source Subscribe to read | Financial Times
            Last edited by Superfly; 27 February 2020, 18:46.

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              #26
              It happened about 10/11 years ago as part of a DTA scheme. It was a HMRC mix up. Still took them 24 hours to back down.

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                #27
                A propos of nothing, @BaloPig 's twitter time line is interesting.

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