Why is it that there’s one law for the rich and one for the poor?
“There are currently about 3250 people examining benefit fraud while there are only 300 HMRC people examining the fraud by those that are wealthy tax dodgers. Many of whom give a lot of money to the Tory Party.
Why is it that there’s one law for the rich and one for the poor?”
Quote from -Labour MP Dennis Skinner
Let’s see that in action…..
The British government refused to assist a French investigation into suspected money laundering and tax fraud by the UK telecoms giant Lycamobile – citing the fact that the company is the “biggest corporate donor to the Conservative party” and gives money to a trust founded by Prince Charles.
“It is of note that they are the biggest corporate donor to the Conservative party led by Prime Minister Theresa May and donated 1.25m Euros to the Prince Charles Trust.”
CHANCELLOR Philip Hammond has serious questions to answer about HMRC “stonewalling” French requests to inspect the Tories’ biggest corporate donor over money laundering and tax fraud allegations, Labour said today.
The revenue told French tax officers it would not seek a search warrant for the London headquarters of telecoms company Lycamobile, which donated more than £2 million to the Tories up until 2016.
The transnational also gave more than £1 million to the Prince Charles Trust, according to a BuzzFeed investigation reported today.
An HMRC email to the French government explaining that it would not probe the matter actively cites the fact that Lycamobile is the Tories’ biggest corporate donor.
The missive also notes: “[Lycamobile have] significant resources at their disposal and are extremely unlikely to agree to having their premises searched without instructing their own lawyers to look at any search warrant in detail.”
Shadow chancellor John McDonnell called on Mr Hammond to immediately explain the behaviour of HMRC and ensure that there “was no undue pressure exerted by Conservative Party politicians or officials.”
He also said: “If true, these are deeply concerning revelations. The fact that a Tory donor could be allowed to potentially subvert the system will look bad to taxpayers who play by the rules.
The Tories have serious questions to answer.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: “HMRC is a government agency, it is part of our government and it should investigate every company without fear and without favour about its tax affairs to make sure they pay the correct amount of tax and there’s no hiding place, no evasion from it, whoever they are.”
The Commons Treasury committee announced today that it will examine why the government refused to help the French authorities.
Labour MP Meg Hillier, chair of spending watchdog the public accounts committee, is also planning to grill HMRC civil servants when they appear before the Commons committee this month.
French prosecutors launched their investigation into Lycamobile two years ago and have arrested 19 people accused of using its accounts to launder money from organised criminal networks.
BuzzFeed has reported that men deployed by Lycamobile with rucksacks full of cash had been secretly filmed depositing £250,000 at a time at post offices.
These daily cash deposits by the bagmen were taking place while Tories were accepting company donations.
An HMRC spokesman said the organisation acted correctly as there were not enough details given by the French authorities to satisfy the legal requirements to secure a search warrant.
He added: “After the French request was rejected, HMRC continued to liaise with the French authorities to explain the statutory requirements for a UK search warrant and offered to meet the French judge face-to-face to explain those requirements.”
HMRC sources said facts about political donations were contained in the correspondence as “background information.”
Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokesman told a Westminster briefing that HMRC “never takes political donations into account” when deciding whether or not to investigate a company.
A Conservative Party spokesman said: “All donations to the Conservative Party are properly and transparently declared to the Electoral Commission, published by them, and comply fully with the law.”
Tory sources said the party decided to stop taking donations from Lycamobile nearly two years ago and has not received any since July 2016.
French prosecutors launched a major probe into the firm and arrested 19 people accused of using its accounts to launder money from organised criminal networks two years ago, after BuzzFeed News revealed its suspicious financial activities in the UK. But the Conservatives continued taking Lycamobile’s money – and it can now be revealed that the British authorities stonewalled a formal request from French prosecutors to carry out raids in London as part of the ongoing investigation.
Confidential correspondence between British government officials and their French counterparts, shown to BuzzFeed News by a source in the UK, reveals that the French wanted British authorities to raid Lycamobile’s London headquarters last year and seize evidence as part of their investigation into money laundering and tax fraud by the company.
In an official response dated 30 March 2017, a government official noted that Lycamobile is “a large multinational company” with “vast assets at their disposal” and would be “extremely unlikely to agree to having their premises searched”.
The letter, from the team at HMRC that handles law enforcement requests from foreign governments, continued: “It is of note that they are the biggest corporate donor to the Conservative party led by Prime Minister Theresa May and donated 1.25m Euros to the Prince Charles Trust in 2012.” The email referred to Lycamobile’s donations to the British Asian Trust, which was founded by the Prince of Wales to tackle poverty in South Asia, not to his youth foundation The Prince’s Trust which has never received any money from Lycamobile.
The HMRC response went on to say that Lycamobile would be likely to challenge any raids on its properties in court and may succeed because the French request did not contain enough “solid information”. The request stalled, and Lycamobile’s UK offices were never searched.
But the French investigation has continued to gather steam. Lycamobile has been ordered to pay €20 million bail after its two French companies were formally charged with money laundering in a Paris court in November and January.
Please pop over and read more at Buzzfeed.
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