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CRA paid out $37M to tax scammers, unsealed affidavit alleges

- Harvey Cashore, Matthew Pierce

A once-sealed affidavit filed with the Tax Court of Canada and obtained by The Fifth Estate details how alleged scammers tricked the Canada Revenue Agency and made off with $37 million of tax‐ payers' money.

In the document, a litiga‐ tion officer with the Canada Revenue Agency alleges that Toronto-area company Gold Line Telemanage­ment made "material misstateme­nts" on tax returns and was "part of a group of companies that participat­ed in sham transac‐ tions."

The affidavit, which lawyers at KPMG said could cause "irreparabl­e harm" to Gold Line if it was released, was kept off the public record for 10 months.

After a petition to the court from The Fifth Estate, KPMG eventually reversed its position late last year and said its client would no longer oppose the release.

In its own court filings, Gold Line has rejected CRA allegation­s, stating "there was no deceit, intentiona­l or otherwise," in its filings and that it was genuinely en‐ gaged in the long-distance telecom business.

Gold Line has been in the telecom business for decades, selling prepaid long distance telephone cards and other services.

The CRA alleges that start‐ ing in 2016 Gold Line acted as a middle party in the wor‐ ld of wholesale telecom, pur‐ porting to buy and sell inter‐ national telephone call min‐ utes. Based on what the CRA now alleges were "sham" transactio­ns, the company claimed - and received - $37 million in sales tax refunds.

Some of the companies in Gold Line's supply chain are alleged to have participat­ed in a separate case reported on by The Fifth Estate late last year. In that instance, the CRA admits it paid out more than $63 million in what it now calls "illegitima­te" tax re‐ funds.

WATCH | The "Swindling the System" from The Fifth

Estate:

Between these two cases, the CRA claims to have wrongly dispersed $100 mil‐ lion to carousel schemes, a type of fraud that has been well-known to Canadian tax authoritie­s for many years.

Also known as "missing trader fraud," carousel schemes rely on complicate­d supply chains filled with fake companies and invoices to create the appearance that legitimate business transac‐ tions are taking place. The companies then submit bogus tax refund claims that are paid out by unwitting government­s.

"How much do you have to lose before you realize that your tax system might be vulnerable?" Mike Cheetham, a Dubai-based tax fraud analyst, said in an in‐ terview. "If I have to put the blame anywhere, it's all squarely and fairly on the CRA."

Cheetham has previously appeared as an expert wit‐ ness before European Union committees regarding carousel schemes. He said other countries have imple‐ mented a "reverse charge mechanism" to sectors prone to carousel fraud, like tele‐

com and precious metals trading - something Canada has not done.

With a reverse charge mechanism in place, certain industries are exempted from collecting sales taxes, in order to prevent bogus re‐ funds.

"It would take a single paragraph of text in the legis‐ lation" to inhibit this kind of fraud, Cheetham said, adding that there are "20 years of milestones in Europe proving it works."

He said that without these kinds of changes, Canada's tax system is wide open for abuse.

"I will bet there's another five or 10 cases that haven't yet been discovered under‐ way now as we speak."

Federal Revenue Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau did not respond to an email from The Fifth Estate asking why the federal government has not implemente­d the kind of preventive measures taken more than a decade ago in Europe.

In January, Gerald Soroka, the Conservati­ve member of Parliament for the Yel‐ lowhead riding, west of Ed‐ monton, asked the govern‐ ment in writing for an esti‐ mate of how much unwar‐ ranted money the CRA has paid out as a result of carousel schemes.

Bibeau responded that the CRA was "unable to pro‐ vide the informatio­n" be‐ cause "there is no systematic way to estimate the amount of all unwarrante­d paymen‐ ts."

Previous filings made in the case, and not under seal, state that while KPMG provided Gold Line with ex‐ ternal "accounting support" and audited its financial statements, it did not prepare the GST returns at is‐ sue.

Today, KPMG Law, the le‐ gal branch of the firm, repre‐ sents Gold Line in tax court.

In a statement, KPMG said that "due to client confiden‐ tiality," it cannot provide comment on the case.

Gold Line also said that as the matter is before the courts, it had been advised not to comment.

'Sham' transactio­ns

According to a CRA analysis, Gold Line sold 10 million more minutes than it pur‐ chased. But as an intermedi‐ ary, Gold Line's sales and purchases should be rela‐ tively equal, it said.

"There is overwhelmi­ng evidence that Gold Line was colluding with its suppliers and customers to deceive the CRA" the once-sealed affi‐ davit states.

The CRA alleges the com‐ pany was either knowingly in‐ volved in the scheme or "grossly negligent," noting that Gold Line did business with Canadian suppliers that were not registered to collect GST or HST, didn't have proper telecom licences, "had no business location, had no telecommun­ications experience and had no em‐ ployees other than the share‐ holder/director."

Based on this and a num‐ ber of other factors, the CRA concluded that "the purchase and sales transactio­ns are sham."

The case is ongoing in the Tax Court of Canada and Gold Line argues that the tax credits it claimed were en‐ tirely based on taxes it paid to its Canadian suppliers.

Other companies in the supply chain have also gone to court to deny the CRA's al‐ legations, none of which have been tested in court. It is possible that some inter‐ mediaries in carousel schemes can be caught up unwittingl­y. If you have any tips on this story, please email in confidence Matthew.Pierce@cbc.ca or Harvey.Cashore@cbc.ca or call 416-526-4704.

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