Update: Swiss Bank Accounts; Tax Havens and Cheating the American Tax System

share
0
0

Recent videos from Left Agenda

4 I'm Gay! Apparently?
Sep 21, 2009
109 videos see all

what people are saying

J Lopez commented on this video
MONEY launderers are moved by greed, unlike Jason Sharman, a political scientist at Australia’s Griffith University. Yet with a budget of $10,000 and little more than Google (and the ads at the back of this paper), he showed how easy it was to circumvent prohibitions on banking secrecy, forming anonymous shell companies and secret bank accounts across the world. In doing so he has uncovered an uncomfortable truth for many of the leaders of Group of 20 nations meeting on April 2nd to discuss, among other things, sanctions against offshore tax havens. The most egregious examples of banking secrecy, money laundering and tax fraud are found not in remote alpine valleys or on sunny tropical isles but in the backyards of the world’s biggest economies. Sharman tried to open anonymous shell companies and bank accounts 45 times across the world. These were successful in 17 cases, of which 13 were in OECD countries. One example was Britain, where in 45 minutes on the internet he formed a company without providing identification, was issued with bearer shares (which have been almost universally outlawed because they confer completely anonymous ownership) as well as nominee directors and a secretary. All was achieved at a cost of £515.95 ($753).

In other cases Mr Sharman formed companies by providing no more than a scanned copy of his driving licence. In contrast, when trying to open accounts in Bermuda and Switzerland, he was asked for documentation such as notarised copies of his birth certificate. “In practice OECD countries have much laxer regulation on shell corporations than classic tax havens,” Mr Sharman concludes. “And the US is the worst on this score, worse than Liechtenstein and worse than Somalia.”
http://www.economist.com/finance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=13382279
May
30
This is Jessica, an intern in Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch division. She and the crew over there did this video to show how easy it is to set up an offshore tax shelter. The answer to that questions after a couple calls to attorneys in Panama? Easy. Very easy. Yes, the conversation in the video is real. No, she didn’t actually set the corporation up. But she could have and that’s one of the arguments against a NAFTA-type expansion to Panama. Read more about the issues at our sister blog, Eyes on Trade.Posted in Trade Tagged: nafta, Panama
May
14
Watch this whole video - it’s short and pretty remarkable. A 20-year old intern for the advocacy organization Public Citizen set up an offshore Panamanian tax haven. Public Citizen produced the video as a serious debate over the pending Panama free trade agreement begins to heat up in Congress. Rep. Bruce Braley (D-Iowa) is leading a coalition of House Democrats in an effort to slow the Obama administration in case it plans to move forward on the agreement.
Watch closely for your eyes may be deceived.  Yes, Jess is only an intern.  True, she knows very little about banking or corporate law.  But somehow, when she calls a Panama banker she’s informed that once she pays them, then her offshore U.S. tax exempt bank account will be ready to go as well as her Panama corporation.  Any funds that are derived in other countries can then be transferred to Panama and the entire thing *poof* disappears.  What about laws?  Won’t her name be involved?  Nope, they set up a public corporation which basically removes her name from any corporate or banking information.  Will the U.S. find out?  Nope, again, Panama banking secrecy is great, no one will ever know.Thanks Jess, and thanks to Public Citizen for showing us how easy it is for large corporations to completely screw over the American people and lie about their income.Posted in Home, Left News Tagged: Business, conservative, corporations, death, democrat, FTA, liberal, libertarian, news, Obama, panama, politics, public citizen, republican, tax-haven, taxes, video
May
13

add a comment

2000 characters left.
First collected by Left Agenda
May 13, 2009
from youtube.com
join Your favorite videos on the web, in one place. Start your collection now.

related videos

tags

collected by 6 people

details

173 views

original description

As was mentioned awhile back on Left Agenda, there are thousands millions of people and corporations that are evading taxation through the use of tax havens. It's not that hard really.  Here, watch an intern do it: As stated earlier, The BBC has reported that the United States IRS has requested the identities and account information of over 50,000 U.S. residents believed to have illegally cheated on their taxes.  For now, the UBS (one of the largest Swiss banks famous for this type of activity) is denying said information because it would go against Swiss law. Well, now reports are stating: The Swiss and U.S. governments announced a deal Wednesday to settle American demands for the identities of suspected tax dodgers, despite Switzerland's vaunted bank secrecy. But they kept all details under wraps, including how many of the 52,000 names sought by the IRS from banking giant UBS AG will be revealed. We don't know how many are being revealed, but we know that some of them are.  That's improvement, and that's less tax evasion. The best part is that no one knows whose names are being turned over, including those people that have accounts with UBS, so many people are turning themselves in while amnesty is still available: UBS paid a $780 million penalty earlier this year and turned over names of about 300 American clients in a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department. In that case, UBS admitted helping U.S. citizens evade taxes, which experts say is not a violation of Swiss bank secrecy laws. So far, three UBS customers whose names were divulged under the prior agreement have pleaded guilty to tax charges in federal court. Hundreds of others holders of secret accounts at UBS and other Swiss banks have voluntarily come forward to the IRS under an amnesty program that requires payment of taxes and penalties but generally does not include the threat of prison. That amnesty program ends Sept. 23. News of the agreement has had an immediate effect
Flag this Video as inappropriate or broken