In recent years there has been increased emphasis of the need for
financial service providers to "Know Your Customer". This has come to
refer the need to obtain satisfactory proof of identity and address
documents and to take up references and may in some cases have obscured
the necessity for such persons to have a greater in depth knowledge of
their clients, their assets and their activities. Why, you may ask?
One reason is that such knowledge is invaluable in ensuring that any
advice given is appropriate to the circumstances and another that the
advisor is increasingly at risk of prosecution if the tax authority
already has information relating to a possible fraud and which the
advisor might be expected to discover if it is conducted thorough due
diligence.
In the U.K. the tax authorities take the view that
offshore structures present a major risk of serious fraud and devote
considerable resources to uncovering such arrangements and adopt an
increasingly robust approach to existing reporting requirements. We
outline some of their methods in this article and although reference is
to the U.K. this is a subject, which is equally relevant to other
countries, which also adopt sophisticated methods and allocate extensive
resources for the same purpose.
Undisclosed offshore banking accounts
The Offshore Fraud Projects Team (OFPT)
is seeking information from financial advisors about their customers
and the movement of funds offshore. In particular, it is asking banks
for information in respect of customers' for whom they have moved funds
offshore using third parties or suspense accounts, thereby bypassing the
customers' own accounts.
The OFPT is also writing to taxpayers
whom it has reason to suspect have offshore banking accounts, enquiring
why there is no tax liability in respect of those accounts. The holding
of such accounts is not itself evidence of fraud but in the absence of a
prompt reply, a formal investigation may be opened.
Offshore credit and debit cards
Following the example of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service,
the tax authority is establishing a project to identify taxpayers who
have credit cards or debit cards issued by offshore banks, investigating
the use of those cards in the U.K. and obtaining information directly
from the credit card companies.
Once again, possession of a card
such as these is not evidence of fraud, but it is another way of
obtaining additional information. Persons who are resident in the U.K.
but not domiciled there, will need to be extra vigilant and ensure that
use, in the U.K., of cards issued offshore does not inadvertently
constitute a remittance for income tax or capital gains tax purposes.
European Saving Tax Directive
The
Directive requires paying agents (banks etc.) to report any savings
income they pay to individuals resident in a prescribed territory.
Prescribed territories are the 25 EU member states, Aruba, British
Virgin Islands, Gibraltar, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Jersey, Montserrat and
the Netherlands Antilles. Paying agents in these territories make
similar reports thereby establishing a network for the exchange of
information.
Existing reporting arrangements
These are under close scrutiny. The objective is to identify unreported offshore structures,
how they were funded and where their income arises and to check whether
taxpayers have failed to report and pay tax on income or capital
distributions.
There is an obligation on any person resident in
the U.K. (other than a barrister), who in the course of a trade or
profession has been concerned with the making of a settlement by a U.K.
domiciled settlor, where the trustees are non-resident, to provide
details to the Revenue. The report must be made within three months.
We understand that the words "concerned with" are being widely
interpreted to include persons through whom funds are remitted, which
would include banks and professional firms.
We also understand
that the Revenue have been writing to U.K. parent companies to enquire
whether their offshore subsidiaries have made these returns and that a
number of non-U.K. financial institutions have provided information
leading to the discovery of previously unreported trusts.
Where
the Revenue has been unsuccessful in obtaining information from
non-resident trustees, it will generally put pressure, under threat of
penalties, upon U.K. resident settlors and beneficiaries, even though
these persons may have no power to compel provision of the information.
Other sources of information
The Revenue has power to obtain information from third parties and of course from the targeted taxpayer.
The Centre for Revenue Intelligence
holds an extensive database, including the registration of aircraft,
yachts and motor vehicles and on gold and silver and car valuations,
bank, building society and mortgage interest and property transactions
Finally,
or perhaps not, information is gathered from informers, information
exchange agreements, double taxation treaties and surveillance
operations.
For more articles please visit our news items and fact sheets pages.
Source
Big Brother is Watching
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 12:03 AM
