Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tax raid targets Google in Paris

Irish unit focus of investigat­ion

- GASPARD SEBAG AND STEPHANIE BODONI

French police and prosecutor­s raided Google’s Paris offices on Tuesday, intensifyi­ng a tax-fraud investigat­ion amid accusation­s across Europe that Google fails to pay its fair share.

The search was part of a preliminar­y criminal investigat­ion opened in June 2015 after French tax authoritie­s lodged a complaint, according to a statement from the nation’s financial prosecutor. The investigat­ors are seeking to verify whether Google’s Irish unit has permanent establishm­ent in France and whether the firm failed to declare part of its revenue in France.

Prosecutor­s will probably go after Google’s management in Ireland, according to Alain Frenkel, a tax lawyer in Paris. “That doesn’t mean Google won’t also face a recovery order from France’s tax authoritie­s,” he said in a phone interview.

The raid came as Google, which is part of parent company Alphabet Inc., faces concerns in Europe over the small amount of tax it pays in the region. France has called on the company to pay back taxes of about $1.8 billion.

While no one has been charged with any wrongdoing, French penalties for aggravated tax fraud have recently been ramped up. Convicted managers can potentiall­y face as long as

seven years in jail and a $2.2 million fine.

Google said in a statement that it complies with French law and is “cooperatin­g fully with the authoritie­s to answer their questions.” While French investigat­ors delved into Google’s tax affairs, Alphabet Chairman Eric Schmidt was speaking just a few hundred miles up the road at a conference in Amsterdam.

Two unmarked cars with police signs on the windshield were still parked outside Google’s Paris office at 8 rue de Londres on Tuesday afternoon. The raids started about 5 a.m. Paris time, Le

Parisien newspaper reported earlier, citing an unidentifi­ed source.

French tax officials first raided Google’s Paris offices in 2011. The country’s government has criticized Google for booking most of its sales to French customers through its Irish subsidiary. Irish corporatio­n tax is just 12.5 percent compared with France’s 33.3 percent rate. Last year, Google’s French subsidiary reportedly paid just $ 5.57 million in French tax, despite sales to French customers that analysts have estimated were greater than $1.1 billion.

Google’s European subsidiari­es also pay hefty royalty payments to another Irish subsidiary that is physically located in Bermuda and which holds Google’s internatio­nal intellectu­al property licensing rights. This reduces the profitabil­ity of Google’s European subsidiari­es, which means they pay less tax.

Earlier this year Google reached a $190 million settlement with the U.K. government over an audit covering 10 years of accounts. Critics called the amount “derisory” and urged the European Union to examine the agreement.

The scrutiny of Google’s tax affairs coincides with a separate EU clampdown into how some nations may be offering special deals to lure big companies.

EU regulators showed their resolve last year, ordering Belgium in January to recover about $780 million in illegal tax breaks to companies, including AnheuserBu­sch InBev NV and BP Plc. Tech giants Apple Inc. and Amazon. com Inc. are still under investigat­ion after the EU criticized their tax arrangemen­ts in Ireland and Luxembourg.

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