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Paradise Papers - Tax Authority to cross-reference data to spot tax evaders

caymanInspectors from the anti-fraud unit of Portugal’s tax authority are to analyse the Paradise Papers information, recently published by the international consortium of journalists, but won’t be buying the detailed information held on file.

The Tax and Customs Authority (AT) is fully aware of the revelations in the Paradise Papers and will be doing its own thing when investigating the names relating to Portugal.

The AT will not request information directly from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (CIJI) as it feels this is unnecessary, at this stage of its inspection.

The strategy adopted by the Portuguese tax administration is similar to that followed in early 2016 when the Panama Papers appeared. This was a huge leak of information that enabled Portugal’s tax inspectors to analyse 165 tax residents in the country which triggered just 13 inspections.

The first step is cross-referencing the published information with the AT files to look for evidence of tax evasion and aggressive tax planning. The second phase is for the anti-fraud unit to exchange information with external bodies.

The Paradise Papers contains references to more than 70 Portuguese nationals, including former directors of Grupo Espírito Santo and Banco Português de Negócios (BPN) - the bust bank that was bailed out and then failed amid allegations of corruption and mismanagement.

Of the 763 Portuguese names in the Paradise Papers, there are only three offshore companies, two in Bermuda and one in the Cayman Islands.

Asked by journalists from Público if it intends to request information from the international consortium of journalists about Portuguese names, the office of the Secretary of State for Tax Affairs, António Mendonça Mendes, said that the consortium has adopted a policy of not giving additional information, referring enquirers to the information it has made public.

Mendes could have just said "no."

With the low hit rate for tax evaders listed in the Panama Papers, the media is not holding its collective breath that anything much will come of the latest revelations.

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Comments  

0 #4 Denby 2017-11-26 08:07
Any news on UK elite family of royals, of shore horde of money gathered from hard working UK people.
-1 #3 nogin the nog 2017-11-22 19:45
hmm
Any news on the 10 Billion Euros that vanished off shore while under the watch of the very same
Tax Authority.. :-*
-1 #2 Daphne 2017-11-22 19:40
Given the billions 'stolen'from Portugal's accounts over the last 30 years by their elite it is clear that Panama or Paradise Papers are seen as unwelcome - even illegal - intrusions into the cosy banking arrangements shifting public structural funds and assets off-shore.
As we found with Putin of Russia who has his money apparently in his pianist school friends name - when will Portugal's Financas start looking deeper into 'Friends and Family? Ex PM Socrates made it too obvious as his mate Silva was the named beneficiary for any bungs for construction work done by the Lena Group.
0 #1 Peter Booker 2017-11-22 08:44
Could it be that Sr Mendes is anxious not to find the names of any of his friends mentioned on this new list? Before he was employed by government, could it be that Sr Mendes had a position in the banking sector? For example in GES or BPN?

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