Strategy
EXCLUSIVE GUEST OPINION: Maitland Highlights Basic Importance Of Following The Money

Following the money trail is one of the oldest points in solving financial - or indeed other - crimes. Needless to say, it is particularly germane to international financial centres, as this article explains.
This article is by Anthony Markham, partner, and Dalila Ver
Elst, senior compliance officer at Maitland, the South
Africa-headquartered asset management and fiduciary services
firm.
25 years ago, before information technology changed the world,
the tax collector already knew where he had to go to find
non-compliance: he had to follow the cash. Usually this meant
identifying cash businesses with undeclared income, or money from
the narcotics trade or similar activities. In 2014, the work of
tax agents operates in a much more sophisticated and
international environment, but they are still “following the
money”. The way the money moves has changed, the way in which the
money is followed has changed, but the underlying drive remains
the same.
In 2000, the US Internal Revenue Service became interested in the
foreign bank accounts of US persons which they accessed by credit
cards. In this way money could be spent with no detection and
thus tax evasion occurred. During the period 2000 to 2002 the IRS
obtained judicial relief by way of a John Doe summons, by which
it requested banks to supply the particulars of US addresses
related to any bank or credit card account held with it. 42,000
bank accounts were reported by US taxpayers, but the information
gathered showed that there were many more. It is now the fourth
year of the IRS’s voluntary disclosure program and 45,000
disclosures have been made by US taxpayers to their tax
authorities about their offshore accounts. The IRS is following
the money. Incidentally, nearly all of the recalcitrant taxpayers
blamed their offshore advisors for their failure to be compliant
in the US.
The UK’s HM Revenue and Customs is cracking down on “Offshore
Evasion”, as part of its drive to “follow the money”. Offshore is
closer to us all as a result of modern communications technology
and the internet. HMRC
regards offshore evasion as using another jurisdiction’s systems
with the objective of evading UK tax. This includes:
-- Moving UK gains, income or assets offshore to conceal them
from HMRC;
-- Not declaring taxable income or gains that arise overseas, or
taxable assets kept overseas;
-- Using complex offshore structures to hide beneficial ownership
of assets, income or gains.
HMRC will consult later this year on introducing a strict
liability offence of failing to declare taxable offshore
income.
Whether it is offshore or onshore, information technology in all
its forms has made it easier to move money around the
world. The same technology is being applied to facilitate
increasing international reporting, which will make it easier to
follow the money.
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), although
introduced by the US, is part of the global drive to exchange tax
information. Some 73 foreign governments have agreed to supply
information to the IRS under FATCA, not to mention entities in
other countries that have signed FATCA agreements with the IRS.
The Isle of Man has agreed to implement the Common Reporting
Standard proposed by the G20 although there is no timetable for
this yet.
The UK has received significant co-operation too, with 44
jurisdictions agreeing with HMRC to automatically share
information on financial accounts. Those who fear that the
disclosure of their wealth may make them vulnerable victims to
crimes such as kidnapping, may take some comfort from the
confidentiality requirements and restrictions that accompany the
disclosure of information. Nevertheless, authorities should
recognise that some distrust of government by private individuals
is legitimate.
FATCA is entirely likely to be replaced by a Common Reporting
Standard involving many more tax authorities over the next five
years or so.
The focus of tax collectors is still to follow money, and where
there is crime there is usually money, and usually it has not
been taxed. So far the inter-governmental agreements to exchange
information have done little to curb the flow of funds from the
narcotics trade into the conventional financial system.
The net volume of globally intercepted drugs is 10 to15 per cent
of what is produced. However, only 0.5 per cent of drug-related
funds and other assets are confiscated. This means that almost
all drug profits are integrated into the world’s legitimate
financial system. The illicit drug trade accounts for half of all
proceeds of transnational organised crime and for a fifth of all
criminal proceeds, according to a June 2014 report by the
Financial Action Task Force (FATF). And according to the United
Nations Al Qaeda & Taliban Sanctions Monitoring Team’s
assessments, one third of the Taliban’s total $400 million
budget for 2011-2012 was raised from the poppy trade.
Despite all the above, this year drugs-related crime
investigations ranked only eighth on the priority list of the
chief of the Criminal Investigations Bureau of the IRS’s annual
business plan.
The list for this year, in order of importance, reads:
Identity Theft; Return Preparer Fraud; Questionable Refund Fraud;
International Tax Fraud; Fraud Referral Program; Counterterrorism
and Sovereign Citizens; Political/ Public Corruption; Organised
Crime Drug Enforcement; Bank Secrecy Act; Asset
Forfeiture;Voluntary Disclosure Programme.
One may ask why Identity Theft is at the top of the list, ranking
eight priority places above drug-related criminal investigations.
The answer lies in the IRS’s very generous tax rebate system,
under which it pays without delay any rebates due by it to
taxpayers. Criminals have found it relatively easy and very
lucrative to steal social security numbers for example from a
school, filling in tax returns relating to those social security
numbers, securing a tax refund, and asking for the cheque to be
posted to an address accessed by them, or to be paid into a
pre-paid debit card account. So easy is this crime (which is only
possible at its current scale as a result of information
technology) that drug traffickers have switched to it in
preference to the narcotics trade – as evidenced by police raids
on the vehicles of suspected drug traffickers, which reveal no
evidence of drugs but evidence of identity theft.
The fourth priority on the list is International Tax Fraud, and
this is driven by the concern over offshore tax evasion.
The IRS has a 93.1 per cent conviction rate in matters it sends
for prosecution. Investigations are expensive (estimated cost per
investigation is $211,048) hence the IRS directs resources at
worthwhile matters only.
While information technology has shrunk the world and opened a
whole new set of possibilities for the would-be tax evader and
money launderer, it has also given the tax collectors a whole new
toolkit with which to follow the money.