Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Thursday, 4 December 2014

Public Accounts Committee

Investigations by Revenue into Authorised Officers Report

10:30 am

Ms Josephine Feehily:

I thank the Chairman and members of the committee for the invitation to attend today’s meeting. I understand the committee’s focus for today is on the action taken by Revenue in relation to the information received from the authorised officer’s Ansbacher reports. I welcome the opportunity to assist the committee in this regard and I will endeavour to be as open and transparent as possible. At the same time, the confidentiality of taxpayer information is a central element in the tax system and under section 851A of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997, it is a criminal offence for any past or serving Revenue officer to disclose taxpayer information. I appreciate the committee has always understood this any time I have appeared before it previously. This obligation is not affected by the fact that elements of the information enter the public domain and the information retains its character as “taxpayer information” and therefore retains the protection of section 851A. I am also, inevitably, somewhat constrained by the passage of time and because many of the senior Revenue officers who dealt with the authorised officer’s reports have retired.
As reported to the committee in the past, over 15 years ago the Revenue Commissioners commenced an investigation into the operation of the Ansbacher accounts and the tax affairs of the Irish resident account holders following the publication of the McCracken report. A copy of the report of the authorised officer completed in June 1999 was received shortly afterwards from the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment. This report contained information about the alleged involvement of 120 named individuals with Ansbacher (Cayman) Limited. On receipt of the report, a special project team led by a very experienced senior official was set up to investigate the tax affairs of the named individuals, associated persons and trusts. This team consisted of around 20 experienced Revenue staff. The authorised officer’s report was a very important contribution to these investigations. The team examined all the information which came to Revenue from the authorised officer and his Ministers whether there was evidence of an Ansbacher deposit or not. From the outset it was recognised that the investigations would be complex and time consuming.
In parallel with the authorised officer’s report, in September 1999 Revenue also obtained High Court orders against two financial institutions and two other entities. These orders required the parties to supply information, particulars and documentation in relation to the Ansbacher deposits. Some 200,000 documents were received on foot of these orders alone over a four-year period.
As the investigations and examinations continued, the extensive use of legislative powers was necessary, requiring the production by financial institutions and other third parties of books, records, and documentation that were relevant to establishing the liabilities or otherwise of account holders and other named individuals. Following receipt, in July 2002, of the High Court inspectors’ report into the affairs of Ansbacher (Cayman) Limited, an application was made to the High Court for access to the supporting papers to the report. This application was held in open court over three days and the information, when Revenue received it, proved particularly important in progressing investigations into individual cases. Another helpful order enabled the authorised officer to allow Revenue to inspect and copy microfilm records which he held. Since the start of the investigation 26 High Court orders were obtained against financial institutions and third parties relevant to the liabilities of the Ansbacher account holders, the most recent in 2013. Revenue received over 300,000 documents in the course of this investigation. Advanced investigative computer software was used in collating, interrogating and managing the vast volume of financial documentation concerned.
Turning to the Companies Act 1990, over the period from September 1999 to February 2011, Revenue received extensive reports, information, books and documents from the Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation - under the various titles that ministerial portfolio held over those years - relating to Ansbacher accounts. All of this information has been examined and followed up and is included in the cases which were investigated by the Ansbacher project team on which Revenue has previously written to the Public Accounts Committee. My officials also advise me that over this period many helpful meetings were held with the authorised officer.
Altogether, the investigations and examinations identified some 289 cases. The number of connected entities consisting of trusts, associated companies, offshore entities, etc., related to the 289 substantive cases was nearly 700. As of now, 283 cases have been finalised. Of the remaining six, five have made a payment on account and four are under appeal. 138 of the finalised cases yielded €113 million in tax, interest and penalties. 58 significant settlements have been published in the quarterly tax defaulters list and are on the public record, most with the designation “Ansbacher”.
From the outset, there were a small number of cases already under investigation as a result of other Revenue projects, for example tribunal-related investigations. These are recorded separately and those particular cases yielded over €6 million.
In addition to the 289 cases, as a result of increased knowledge of the use of offshore structures and trusts used in the transmission of funds, Revenue set up a number of other projects including a very successful offshore assets project team. For example, one Ansbacher-related High Court order resulted in additional yield of €25 million in a spin-off investigation. A second such investigation in relation to trusts and offshore structures has resulted in an addition €65 million to date. This investigation is ongoing and the final yield is likely to exceed €115 million. The combined yield, therefore, from the Ansbacher investigations and two spin-offs will likely exceed €250 million. The knowledge gained has also allowed Revenue to break new legal ground and support the case for changes to Revenue's investigative powers.
It is important from a fairness perspective to put on record that although a person may be named in an Ansbacher report, that in itself is not proof that an Ansbacher account was held by that person, nor is it proof of tax evasion. This was underlined by the High Court inspectors in their report published in June 2002 and I quote:

CAVEAT: It is important to bear in mind that a finding that any particular individual is a client of Ansbacher, is NOT a finding that the person evaded tax. As will be seen further on, persons who have been identified as clients did not necessarily have deposits with Ansbacher. Some such persons simply borrowed money from Ansbacher in the ordinary course of business, a transaction giving rise to no tax liability whatsoever. Others again established Trusts to which they never transferred any assets.
In this context, around half of the cases under investigation - 145 cases - were finalised and did not result in any yield from this project. Of these, 69 cases were established to be foreign non-resident cases with no liability to Irish tax. 20 cases were covered by the Waiver of Certain Tax, Interest and Penalties Act 1993. The balance of cases included individuals who were bank clients but not deposit holders and cases that had correctly declared the deposits in their annual tax returns of income.
As the Comptroller and Auditor General has just said, his office has regularly reported in his Annual Report on progress of the Ansbacher project and presented these updates to the PAC in the normal way, and they were examined. Progress was also reported each year in Revenue’s annual reports from 1999 to 2007.
Turning to the question of prosecutions, Revenue actively considered prosecution under the Taxes Acts in a number of cases.

However, an essential element for a successful criminal prosecution is the availability of relevant original documents and that element was largely missing. There were very few original documents available and there was no legal mechanism to compel Cayman entities to produce documents or their employees to give evidence. The time elapsed was also a very significant factor. The Ansbacher accounts ran from 1971 until the mid-1990s. The time elapsed was typically in excess of ten years. Section 1078(7) of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 provides that proceedings have to be instituted within ten years from the date of the commission of the offence. In consultation, however, and in co-ordination with other relevant agencies which were considering their prosecution options, Revenue officials provided witness statements to An Garda Síochána at their request.

In conclusion, I am satisfied that Revenue made full and appropriate use of all the information received from the authorised officer’s reports, the High Court inspectors’ report and its underlying documents. I want to assure the committee in particular that all the authorised officer’s material referred to Revenue by the Ministers for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation was fully examined and followed up, wherever it took us.

Revenue allocated and maintained a significant experienced investigative resource in a dedicated project team. We made extensive use of legislative powers to seek books and records, and where these powers did not achieve success we went to the High Court to progress the investigation and overcome blockages. We obtained, as I have said, a significant number of orders.

Revenue staff have shown resilience and persistence in bringing all the cases identified to conclusion, with a significant yield of €49 million in tax and a further €64 million in interest and penalties. The lessons learnt from this investigation have been important in the success of other related projects, in developing new law and supporting enhanced investigative powers.

As the Comptroller and Auditor General has pointed out, our inquiries into Ansbacher were part of a series of special investigations into serious tax evasion involving various forms of bogus non-resident accounts and offshore accounts which have yielded in total €2.7 billion in tax, interest and penalties to date. These investigations were comprehensively followed through and they provided a model for similar investigations in other revenue jurisdictions.