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PRESS RELEASE
(Source : Government Information Centre)
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Property owners convicted of tax evasion sentenced
to suspended imprisonment
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A couple, who jointly owned a property located at
Fa Yuen Street, Mongkok, Kowloon for letting purposes, were convicted
of evading Property Tax at the District Court today (June 9). They
were sentenced to six months' jail term, suspended for two years,
a fine of $30,000 each and a further fine of $200,000 each.
The first defendant, Mr Tsang Ka-shing, aged 54, pleaded guilty
to five charges of wilfully with intent to evade tax by making a
false statement or entry in the Property Tax Return in respect of
the property for the years of assessment from 1995/96 to 1999/2000,
contrary to section 82(1)(b) of the Inland Revenue Ordinance.
His wife, the second defendant, Ms Choy Hong-kiu, aged 50, pleaded
guilty to five charges of wilfully with intent to evade tax by making
use of fraud, art or contrivance to understate the rental income
of the property for the years of assessment from 1995/96 to 1999/2000,
contrary to section 82(1)(g) of the Inland Revenue Ordinance.
The Court heard that investigation by the Inland Revenue Department
(IRD) revealed that the defendants received rental income totalling
$5.9 million from letting of the property during the relevant five
years of assessment. However, the defendants, wilfully with intent,
created a sham head tenant for the property and treated part of
the property's rental income as that of the said sham head tenant.
A savings account, in name of the second defendant and the sham
head tenant, was operated and controlled by the second defendant
as the depository for rental income from the property. The monies
deposited were eventually withdrawn by the second defendant and
transferred to the defendants' joint savings account.
The defendants had understated the assessable value of the property
by $5,081,900 in the Property Tax Return for the five years of assessment.
The resultant tax undercharged was $358,387 in total for the first
defendant and $309,810 in total for the second defendant.
A spokesman for the IRD said that tax evasion is a criminal offence
under the Inland Revenue Ordinance. The maximum penalty will be
three years' imprisonment and a fine of $50,000 on each charge,
plus a further fine equivalent to three times of the tax evaded.
Tax evaders may also face prosecution of cheating public revenue
under Common Law and is punishable by the Criminal Procedure Ordinance,
which carries a maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment plus
a fine of no limit.
End/Monday, June 9, 2003
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