The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Hustle star rages at the taxman over £147k bill

- By Chris Hastings

HUSTLE star Robert Glenister has accused the taxman of behaving like a ‘secret police force’ after losing a nine-year battle over unpaid National Insurance contributi­ons.

Speaking for the first time since learning that he owes HMRC £147,000 plus interest, he told The Mail on Sunday: ‘We have had the judgment now so… I am going to get a brown envelope fairly soon.

‘I have got two options – either I sell my house or I remortgage my house. I don’t want to sell it because I am 60 next year and the only other alternativ­e is to have a significan­t mortgage hanging around my neck until I am well into my 70s.’

Glenister, whose brother Philip played Gene Hunt in the TV hits Life On Mars and Ashes To Ashes, last week lost his appeal against a ruling by a tax tribunal.

It was a decision that could have significan­t consequenc­es for other performers.

The dispute centred on the actor’s decision in 2004 to set up Big Bad Wolff Ltd, a personal service company (PSC) that charged for his work as a performer. Being paid through a PSC, rather than as a member of staff on the payroll, has typically enabled celebritie­s and other contractor­s who regularly work for just one employer to pay lower rates of tax and National Insurance. Some employers have favoured this approach because it can also reduce a company’s National Insurance bills, but HMRC has become stricter on what it calls ‘disguised employment’.

Glenister says he set up the company in good faith and thinks it is unfair to back-date payments to 2004 when HMRC did not contact him until 2010. ‘This isn’t a tax avoidance issue,’ he said. ‘It’s a compliance issue. I was advised to set up the company by my then accountant.’

Glenister, who is being supported by actors’ union Equity, said HMRC ‘acts like an anonymous secret police force… They treat you like a criminal. I don’t think you can do that in a civilised society’.

The actor collapsed on stage in 2017. He has been prescribed anti-depressant­s and medication for high blood pressure and fears for his career.

The HMRC said it did not comment on individual cases, but added: ‘We know debt can be stressful, which is why we always take individual circumstan­ces into account.’

‘I don’t think you can do that in a civilised society’

 ??  ?? JUDGMENT: Robert Glenister with Kelly Adams, his co-star in Hustle
JUDGMENT: Robert Glenister with Kelly Adams, his co-star in Hustle

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