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PRESS RELEASE
(Source : Government Information Centre)
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Former radio host pleads guilty to tax evasion
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A former radio talk-show host was today
(April 19) sentenced to a three-month imprisonment and a fine of
$200,000 for the four counts on signing fraudulent Profits Tax Returns
by Magistrate Paul Kelly at the Western Magistracy.
The defendant, Ms Pak Wan-kam, Pamela,
pleaded guilty to all four charges on signing fraudulent Profits
Tax Returns for the taxation years 1994/5 to 1997/98, contrary to
section 82(1)(d) of the Inland Revenue Ordinance. Upon sentencing,
she has applied for bail pending appeal.
The four charges were related to the returns
the defendant signed on behalf of her service company, Platinum
Promotion Limited ("Platinum"). At all material times, Platinum's
majority of income came from the defendant's radio programme from
1994 to early 1997.
The investigation by the Inland Revenue
Department (IRD) upon complaint into Platinum's tax affairs revealed
that the defendant had falsely reported in the tax returns of Platinum
that an employee had been hired by the company as public relation
assistant and received remuneration in the total amount of $208,400
for the two taxation years of 1995/96 and 1996/97.
It was further found that, apart from
the false salary expenses, Platinum had in its returns for the four
taxation years from 1994/95 to 1997/98 falsely claimed salaries
expenses of $162,950 related to another employee, inflated its entertainment
and staff benefits expenses in the sum of $735,536; and omitted
to include as income a lump-sum contractual bonus of $450,000 received
from the radio station in September 1994.
The inflated entertainment and staff benefits
expenses were related to 98 restaurant receipts for consumption
of meals at 27 restaurants. Among the business records submitted
by Platinum in support of its expenses, 44 restaurant receipts were
found to be false, and 54 restaurant receipts were altered.
As a result, in the four years of assessment,
Platinum totally understated the profits by $1,556,886, involving
the tax undercharged of $210,122.
An IRD spokesman reminds the public that
tax evasion is a criminal offence. Upon conviction, the maximum
sentence is three years' imprisonment and a fine of $50,000 on each
charge, plus a further fine equivalent to three times the amount
of tax undercharged.
End/Thursday, April 19, 2001
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