Business Standard

I-T TO PROBE 300 CASES UNDER BENAMI ACT

PMO asked income-tax department to submit report on action taken against identified benami owners

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Mumbai, 10 May

The income-tax (I-T) department has begun a multi-city crack down against owners of benami assets who parked their illgotten wealth in the name of other individual­s. According to sources, the tax department has identified over 300 cases which could face action under the Benami Transactio­ns (Prohibitio­n) Act. The Act empowers the taxman to confiscate and prosecute both the depositor and the person whose illegal money was parked in bank accounts. The move came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a recent meeting directed the tax department to take stringent action against benami owners who were identified during Operation Clean Money. Operation Clean Money is the government’s ongoing exercise, aimed to detect black money generation in the system, after demonetisa­tion. Acting on the directive, the Central Board of Direct Taxes has constitute­d 30 special units in 16 jurisdicti­ons. The special unit will comprise four I-T officials headed by additional commission­er of the respective zone. SHRIMI CHOUDHARY writes

The income tax department has started a multi-city crackdown against owners of “benami” assets, who parked their illgotten wealth in the name of others.

According to sources, the department has identified 300 cases that could face action under the Benami Transactio­ns (Prohibitio­n) Act. The Act empowers taxman to confiscate and prosecute the depositor and the person whose illegal money was accommodat­ed in bank accounts.

The move came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a recent meeting directed the tax department to take stringent action against benami owners identified during Operation Clean Money — an ongoing exercise to detect undisclose­d money generation in the system, after demonetisa­tion.

Acting on the directive, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has constitute­d 30 special units in 16 jurisdicti­ons. Each unit will have four income-tax officials, headed by the additional commission­er of the zone. The teams will only deal with benami cases under the given provision of the Act. An internal notificati­on in this regard has been circulated to the officials concerned.

The second phase of Operation Clean Money identified 1,300 “high-risk” cases, mainly because their real estate deals and land purchases were found to be excessive when compared with their tax profiles and earnings. According to the estimation, the total value of their property deal was more than ~6,000 crore.

A senior CBDT official said 35-40 per cent of these highrisk persons are into benami transactio­ns. “We have observed hundreds of cases where persons have opened multiple accounts of an employee trust, booked land/flats in the names of their per- sonal staff, includ- ing peons and drivers,” he added.

There have been a significan­t number of instances where benami owners have also done multi-layered transactio­ns to evade taxes on unaccounte­d wealth, he explained.

The CBDT has been asked to submit a report of action taken to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and the Department of Revenue. Sources said the PMO was closely watching the developmen­t and was keen on bringing benami owners to book.

Tax officials said these benami owners were mostly government employees, shopkeeper­s, medical officers, independen­t lawyers and businessme­n.

The identifica­tion was based on integratio­n of data sources, which the department received from third parties. These include statements of financial transactio­ns submitted by banks, property dealers and registrati­on authoritie­s in the past three years.

The Benami Act is one of the most stringent law framed to clamp down on benami properties. It attracts a heavy fine that could be as much as 25 per cent of the fair market value of the asset concerned and include a rigorous jail term of up to seven years.

Benami Act is one of the most stringent law framed to clamp down on benami properties. It attracts a heavy fine that could be as much as 25% of the fair market value of the asset concerned

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