Millennium Post

I-T department slaps criminal charges under anti-black money Act

PANAMA CASE

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NEW DELHI: Stepping up the probe into the Panama Papers, the Income Tax Department has slapped criminal charges under the new anti-black money Act and launched new assessment of stashed offshore income against over half-a-dozen Indian entities in the list, official sources said.

They said the department has detected undisclose­d assets and stashed funds located in foreign countries in case of seven individual­s and entities named in the leaks and the taxman has begun investigat­ions against them under the Black Money (Undisclose­d Foreign Income and Assets) and Imposition of Tax Act, 2015.

Sources privy to the probe said the tax department has ordered fresh assessment and also re-assessment of the income of these entities and will soon launch criminal prosecutio­n against all of them as the entities had allegedly not disclosed offshore properties to Indian tax and banking authoritie­s in the past.

These are the first set of cases of undisclose­d foreign assets which are being probed under the new antiblack money Act, which has criminal sections for prosecutio­n under the law.

Under the new anti-black money law cases of illegal overseas assets, which till recently were probed under the regular and civil Income Tax Act of 1961, attract a steep 120 per cent tax and penalty on undisclose­d foreign assets and income besides carrying a jail term of up to 10 years.

Prosecutio­n of these seven entities under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) would also be initiated in the coming days, as the anti-black money Act of 2015 qualifies to be a predicate offence for money laundering investigat­ions, they said. The sources refused to divulge the identities of the seven entities citing the overriding global tax informatio­n exchange secrecy clauses between various countries.

The Central Board of Direct Taxes has recently said that investigat­ions in the Panama Papers leak cases till now have resulted in the I-T Department detecting undisclose­d wealth of Rs 792 crore so far and the probe in these cases is on in “full swing”.

Over a year after the Washington­based Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) made the documents public, the CBDT said it had found 147 of the total 426 cases “actionable”.

The department also conducted searches in 35 cases and surveys in 11, the CBDT had said.

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