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Criminal justice and taxation / Peter Alldridge.

By: Alldridge, Peter [author.].Series: Oxford monographs on criminal law and criminal justice: Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017Description: xxxiv, 213 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780198755838.Subject(s): Tax evasion -- Great Britain | Taxation -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain | Investment, Foreign -- Great Britain | Criminal justice, Administration of -- Great BritainDDC classification: 345.2338041
Contents:
Crimes of evasion : history and theory -- Avoidance and evasion -- Criminal evasion of duties and taxes -- Investigation and prosecution structures -- Investigatory powers -- Prosecution and its alternatives -- The international element -- Problems at the intersection of tax and criminal law -- Should alleged tax evaders be prosecuted?
Summary: The fallout from the financial crisis of 2007-8, HSBC Suisse in 2015, and the Panama Papers in 2016 has generated calls for far more vigorous and punitive responses to tax evasion and greater international co-operation against mechanisms for giving anonymity to the ownership of property. One mechanism to ensure compliance is the use of the criminal justice system. The announcement in 2013 by the then Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer, of a policy of increasing rates of prosecution for tax evasion raised squarely the issue of whether increased involvement of criminal law and criminal justice in tax evasion would be justifiable or not. The relationship between tax evasion and the proceeds of crime is taking on increasing importance: treating the 'proceeds of criminal tax evasion' as falling within the 'proceeds of crime' regime inevitably expands the scope of both. In this book, Peter Alldridge considers the development of the offences and the relationship between tax evasion offences and other criminal offences; the relevant rules of evidence; prosecution structures, decision-making processes, and alternatives to prosecution. Specific topics include offshore evasion and the relationship of tax evasion with other crimes and aspects of the criminal justice system. A topical and lively discussion of a heated debate.
Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey 345.2338041 ALL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 013832

Introduction -- Crimes of evasion : history and theory -- Avoidance and evasion -- Criminal evasion of duties and taxes -- Investigation and prosecution structures -- Investigatory powers -- Prosecution and its alternatives -- The international element -- Problems at the intersection of tax and criminal law -- Should alleged tax evaders be prosecuted?

The fallout from the financial crisis of 2007-8, HSBC Suisse in 2015, and the Panama Papers in 2016 has generated calls for far more vigorous and punitive responses to tax evasion and greater international co-operation against mechanisms for giving anonymity to the ownership of property. One mechanism to ensure compliance is the use of the criminal justice system. The announcement in 2013 by the then Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer, of a policy of increasing rates of prosecution for tax evasion raised squarely the issue of whether increased involvement of criminal law and criminal justice in tax evasion would be justifiable or not. The relationship between tax evasion and the proceeds of crime is taking on increasing importance: treating the 'proceeds of criminal tax evasion' as falling within the 'proceeds of crime' regime inevitably expands the scope of both. In this book, Peter Alldridge considers the development of the offences and the relationship between tax evasion offences and other criminal offences; the relevant rules of evidence; prosecution structures, decision-making processes, and alternatives to prosecution. Specific topics include offshore evasion and the relationship of tax evasion with other crimes and aspects of the criminal justice system. A topical and lively discussion of a heated debate.

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