Times Colonist

Crackdown on tax evaders urged

Victoria family allegedly paid little tax after receiving millions from offshore firm

- CINDY E. HARNETT ceharnett@timescolon­ist.com

The Conservati­ve government is not doing enough to crack down on tax evaders, say other parties on the heels of allegation­s by the Canada Revenue Agency that a wealthy Victoria family paid almost no tax over eight years related to an offshore tax “sham” developed by a respected accounting firm.

On Thursday the CBC reported, based on court documents, that Victoria’s Peter Cooper and his two adult sons, Marshall and Richard, signed up in 2000 for a KPMG tax product in the Isle of Man that targeted “high net worth” Canadian residents.

Court documents show that the Cooper family paid little or no tax between 2002 and 2010, yet received almost $6 million from an offshore company. KPMG, which is both a tax and auditing firm, says any money the Coopers received were “gifts” and there- fore non-taxable.

Reached at his home in Victoria, Marshall Cooper told the CBC he was unaware of Canadian tax laws when he emigrated from South Africa in the mid-1990s and used the best people for advice.

KPMG is representi­ng the Coopers in their appeal in tax court. KPMG declined to speak to the broadcaste­r because the matter is before the courts.

Conservati­ve MP John Duncan, who is running in Courtenay-Alberni, said in an email that his government “has zero tolerance for tax evasion.”

The government says the CRA audited more than 8,600 internatio­nal tax cases between 2006 and March 31, 2014, identifyin­g more than $5.6 billion in additional taxes that are being collected. “We have also increased the number of auditors,” Duncan wrote.

The government adds that in the fiscal year 2013-2014, the CRA resolved $46 billion in outstandin­g tax debt and that the CRA received more than 10,000 offshore voluntary disclosure­s.

But Murray Rankin, the NDP candidate for Victoria, said the Conservati­ve government lacks political will and it appears it has not been aggressive in going after those who flout tax laws.

“The fact is that the expertise in the senior ranks of the CRA has been lost over the years,” Rankin said. “Endless cuts to the CRA budget have seriously eroded its capacity to go after complex internatio­nal tax avoidance schemes like the one at issue.”

Rankin said aggressive internatio­nal tax planning must be met with equally senior, experience­d auditors. “If the NDP is elected, this will be a priority for us.”

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said tax havens and tax credits used by extremely wealthy individual­s and corporatio­ns are unethical, inequitabl­e and detrimenta­l to Canada’s economy.

May, the candidate for Saanich-Gulf Islands, said the Green Party would close all tax-haven loopholes. The CRA should be mandated to go after offshore accounts and use more forensic accounting, she said. May esti- mates about $3 billion in additional tax revenues could be recovered annually by closing tax loopholes.

“This latest scandal underlines how negligent Canada has been,” May said.

Saanich-Gulf Islands Liberal candidate Tim Kane said Thursday that tax cheats should be identified and dealt with accordingl­y.

“KPMG is a very reputable firm; therefore, their [alleged] involvemen­t in such a scheme surprises me,” Kane said. “While Liberals have promised to bring greater fairness to the tax system, we know that this fairness goes both ways.”

In 2013, the CRA obtained a judicial order demanding KPMG hand over the names of all the wealthy clients who set up shell companies in the Isle of Man but KPMG Canada is fighting that decision in federal court, the CBC reported.

The CRA alleges in court documents that the KPMG tax structure was a “sham” and hit the Cooper family with an order to repay millions in unpaid taxes and penalties.

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