Offshore
US Turns Sights On Singapore In Hunt For Tax Cheats - Law Firm

A US law firm has taken a closer look at a case pitting the US authorities once more against the world's largest wealth management firm.
Recent moves by the US legal authorities to demand data on
Singapore-based accounts of a UBS client – now living in China –
show how Uncle Sam has opened a new front in its hunt for alleged
tax cheats and is expanding attempts to override foreign banking
regimes, according to a law firm.
As reported here yesterday, the Internal Revenue Service has
asked a federal judge in Miami, Florida, to demand that the
Zurich-listed bank - which settled civil and criminal charges
with the US in 2009 for sheltering US accounts - divulge data on
the Singapore account of Hsiaw Ching-Ye. (For more on this item,
see
here.)
“With a tactic not used in several years, this heralds the
opening of a new front in the US enforcement effort against
unreported foreign assets,” Caplin & Drysdale, a firm of
attorneys with offices in New York and Washington DC, said in a
note.
“Much of the activity in the last eight years has been aimed at
Switzerland, where the US can declare victory. The Miami summons
action reflects that the government will pursue money transferred
out of Switzerland, particularly into Singapore, and that the IRS
and DoJ [Department of Justice] have additional ways to overcome
foreign bank secrecy laws, whether or not the taxpayer under
scrutiny lives in the US,” the note continued.
The law said that the new case seeks to enforce what is called a
"Bank of Nova Scotia" summons. This is a summons type named after
an important 1982 appellate decision, where a court compelled the
Miami branch of Scotiabank to produce records from the bank's
Cayman branch notwithstanding Cayman secrecy laws. The bank
complied in that case. If it had not done so, the court could
have imposed substantial fines on the Miami bank until the Cayman
records were delivered to the IRS, the note said.
“During the past eight years of aggressive US enforcement in the
foreign account area, the Justice Department has not resorted to
this method of obtaining foreign bank records. Instead, the
IRS/DoJ issued 'John Doe' summonses, treaty requests, and
'required record' summonses to taxpayers under audit or
criminal investigation, among other tactics. Now, the DoJ and IRS
want records from Singapore, a bank secrecy jurisdiction long
thought to have attracted money flowing out of Switzerland once
the US crackdown began. Because the taxpayer lives in China, the
IRS cannot serve a summons directly on him, and as the US and
Singapore have no tax treaty, the government issued a 'Bank of
Nova Scotia' summons. The IRS is demanding that the Miami
branch of UBS retrieve from Singapore the sought-after bank
statements, irrespective of Singapore law,” it said.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore, the regulator and de-facto
central bank in the Asian jurisdiction, has insisted it is not a
haven for illicit funds and that bank confidentiality cannot be
used to shield criminal activity. The case does suggest that
having dealt a mortal blow to Switzerland’s renowned bank secrecy
laws, the US may try to achieve a similar victory at the expense
of Singapore and other jurisdictions. To some extent, such
measures may be sidelined by the arrival from 2017 of the
so-called Common Reporting Standard, designed to facilitate
exchange of data between countries. It has been argued that the
US, which operates a worldwide system of tax - unlike most
other countries - is guilty of hypocrisy over issues around tax
transparency (see
here).
In its commentary on the latest case, Caplin & Drysdale said:
“The case is significant for many reasons, but three stand out.
First, it is a tangible example of the vigorous US enforcement
effort to 'follow the money' out of Switzerland to Singapore
and other bank secrecy countries.
“This effort is enhanced by voluminous data provided by Swiss
banks to the DoJ regarding 'leaver' accounts - those
that closed when the US started to push against secret Swiss
accounts. Second, to the extent the IRS or DoJ cannot otherwise
easily obtain records, they will now implement a powerful tactic
to attempt to override foreign secrecy laws; in most reported
cases in this area, federal judges have ruled that US law
prevails over foreign bank secrecy laws. Third, the US shows no
sign of relaxing enforcement efforts simply because a taxpayer
may live outside the reach of US legal jurisdiction,” it
added.