Cape Times

10 charged in Oz with giant tax fraud

- Rod McGuirk

A SENIOR Australian tax bureaucrat and two of his children are among 10 people charged in connection with a sophistica­ted tax fraud that police say netted A$165 million (R1.6 billion) in less than a year.

Australian Taxation Office deputy commission­er Michael Cranston faces up to five years in prison if convicted of abusing his position as a public servant by passing informatio­n to his son, Australian Federal Police Deputy Commission­er Leanne Close said yesterday.

His son Adam Cranston, 30, is managing director of a Sydney-based financial services company that police say was at the centre of the alleged scam involving payroll taxes. Police arrested him, his sister Lauren Cranston and seven others in raids on Wednesday.

They were to be charged with crimes ranging from conspiracy to defraud the government to dealing in the proceeds of crime to demanding money with menaces.

The 58-year-old bureaucrat was not thought to be part of the alleged criminal syndicate, which Close said is accused of spending unpaid taxes on luxury homes, racing cars, airplanes, motorbikes, jewellery, art and vintage wine.

The group ran a legitimate payroll company contracted to pay staff on behalf of their employers. Police allege the scam came in when they introduced subcontrac­tors to pay the salaries. Police allege the subcontrac­tors were “a front” that only paid part of the taxes that the employees owed.

News Corporatio­n reported that the suspects believed they had struck a sweet spot where each individual tax underpayme­nt was too small to trigger a tax office response.

Police began investigat­ing the scam in June last year. The tax office later became aware of the fraud through its internal systems and started working with the police, officials said.

Arrest

Police served Michael Cranston with a notice on Wednesday, after his son’s arrest, to appear in court on June 13. “Michael was in shock when we spoke to him yesterday, as you would imagine, knowing what’s happened to his son,” police detective superinten­dent Kirsty Schofield said.

Three other tax bureaucrat­s face disciplina­ry action for accessing informatio­n about an internal audit of the fraud, Acting Commission­er of Taxation Andrew Mills said. Tax officials are only allowed access to data relevant to their work. – AP

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