By registering with our site you will have full instant access to:
268,000 posts on every subject imaginable contributed by 1000's of members worldwide.
25000 photos and videos mainly relating to the British Merchant Navy.
Members experienced in research to help you find out about friends and relatives who served.
The camaraderie of 1000's of ex Merchant Seamen who use the site for recreation & nostalgia.
Here we are all equal whether ex Deck Boy or Commodore of the Fleet.
A wealth of experience and expertise from all departments spanning 70+ years.
It is simple to register and membership is absolutely free.
N.B. If you are going to be requesting help from one of the forums with finding historical details of a relative
please include as much information as possible to help members assist you. We certainly need full names,
date and place of birth / death where possible plus any other details you have such as discharge book numbers etc.
Please post all questions onto the appropriate forum
-
19th September 2019, 10:32 AM
#1
Australian tax office debt.
Read this article on ABC news website this morning and it really made me angry. I am not picking on Australia as i realise this happens many other places, but how can one family get away with it.
Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo 'dramatically' increased money transfers overseas after ATO audit
By Kathleen Calderwood
Updated yesterday at 1:55pm
Wed 18 Sep 2019, 1:55pm
RELATED STORY: NSW Labor hands back $100K 'Aldi bag' donation
RELATED STORY: 'I'm not the source': Chinese billionaire denies $100,000 Aldi bag donation to NSW Labor
Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo "dramatically" increased transfers of money offshore after he found out he was being audited by the Tax Office, according to a Federal Court judgement.
Key points:
The ATO is chasing Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo for $141 million
Mr Huang left Australia for China last December but the Federal Court froze his assets on Monday
Court documents released Wednesday show that he has transferred $47 million out since an ATO review in 2016
The court granted an urgent interim order freezing Mr Huang's assets in Australia on Monday, following an application by the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation claiming that he had "grossly" understated his income in order to avoid paying tax.
On Wednesday the judge published her reasons for granting that order.
The ATO is pursuing Mr Huang for $141 million in tax, that they say he owes after "grossly understating" his income in the 2013 to 2015 financial years.
In her reasons, Justice Anna Katzmann said Mr Huang left Australia for China on December 4 last year, while an audit of his taxes was ongoing. His visa was cancelled the next day and he withdrew an application for Australian citizenship two weeks later.
According to the judgement, Mrs Huang left Australia only a week ago on September 11, presumably to join her husband in Hong Kong where they are believed to currently live.
The same day, the ATO issued a penalty notice for $141 million, but it was posted the next day. The payment is due on October 7.
In January 2016, a risk review was launched by the tax office into Mr Huang's affairs, which was escalated to an audit in October 2017.
Justice Katzmann said AUSTRAC records show that Mr Huang has been transferring tens of millions of dollars in and out of the country since January 2016 and overall far more money has gone out than come back in.
She continued that Mr Huang has transferred $47 million more out of Australia than he sent back in since he left the country nine months ago — a sum that is nearly twice as much as the previous year.
Justice Katzmann said she found there was a danger that the debt to the ATO could go unpaid because of the possibility the assets could be removed or devalued.
"Although there is no direct evidence that he intended to divest himself of his Australian assets or diminish them in value, the results of the audit indicate an intention to avoid paying tax by grossly understating income," Justice Katzmann wrote.
"Mr Huang is a Chinese national, currently overseas without an Australian visa who, since November 2018, has taken a number of steps towards severing his ties to Australia.
"Mr Huang has already taken steps to divest himself of his interest in Australian companies and trusts.
"Although he transferred money overseas before he was aware that he was under investigation by the ATO, since the audit began the amount of money transferred offshore increased dramatically."
Justice Katzmann also stated that his Australian assets don't appear to be enough to cover the whole debt and that the ATO appeared to have a strong case.
Justice Katzman said Mr Huang started resigning as director of his various Australian companies in March 2016 and by December 21, 2018, he had resigned from all of them bar one.
The freezing order issued this week says Mr Huang cannot remove from the country, dispose or devalue any assets up to the value of $140.9 million.
However, it does allow Mr Huang to spend $10,000 a week on living expenses and up to $50,000 on legal bills.
The freezing order lists four properties in his assets including a mansion with views of Sydney Harbour in the upmarket suburb of Mosman, which was purchased for $12.8 million in 2013 in his wife Jiefang Huang's name.
It also lists two Chatswood properties which are worth more than $6.5 million together and a multi-million-dollar flat in a high-rise tower in Hong Kong.
The judgement says that all these properties appear to be owned outright.
Mrs Huang also owns a Hong Kong property worth $96 million, which she purchased late last year.
Mr Huang moved to Australia in 2011 and began making large-scale political donations.
His links with then-ALP senior figure Sam Dastyari forced the resignation of the politician after it emerged Mr Dastyari had allowed Mr Huang's Yuhu Group to pay a legal bill, among other allegations.
After being denied an Australian passport, an exiled Mr Huang asked for his donations to political parties — believed to be at least $2 million — to be returned to him.
The Independent Commission Against Corruption is currently investigating whether Mr Huang made an illegal $100,000 donation to the NSW Labor Party in 2015.
An ongoing ICAC hearing has heard that Mr Huang allegedly delivered the cash to Labor headquarters on Sussex St in an Aldi shopping bag.
The hearing is investigating whether Mr Huang's donation was disguised in the form of 20 cash donations of $5,000 raised at a Chinese Friends of Labor dinner.
Mr Huang has denied the allegations.
On Wednesday, the ICAC hearing was told that NSW Labor forfeited the donation to the Australian Electoral Commission.
The tax case will return to the Federal Court on Friday.
Topics: politics-and-government, government-and-politics, corruption, political-parties, sydney-2000
First posted yesterday at 1:02pm
Wed 18 Sep 2019, 1:02pm
Print Email Facebook Twitter
-
Post Thanks / Like
-
20th September 2019, 06:29 AM
#2
Re: Australian tax office debt.
Trevor mate, you have no idea of what goes on here.
This is only one of many over the years, all concerning Chinese.
They now own great chunks of the country, but as our major trading partner they d get away with things others would not.
Happy daze John in Oz.
Life is too short to blend in.
John Strange R737787
World Traveller
-
Post Thanks / Like
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules