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The Panama Papers WOOT!

BlkHawk

Closed Account
This isn't getting much coverage here in the States, though I suspect it will as time goes on.

From:http://www.bbc.com/news/world-35973421

Panama Papers - tax havens of the rich and powerful exposed

Eleven million documents held by the Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca have been passed to German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung, which then shared them with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. BBC Panorama is among 107 media organisations - including UK newspaper the Guardian - in 76 countries which have been analysing the documents. The BBC doesn't know the identity of the source

They show how the company has helped clients launder money, dodge sanctions and evade tax

Mossack Fonseca says it has operated beyond reproach for 40 years and never been accused or charged with criminal wrong-doing

This leak has already caused the leader of Iceland to resign, and implicated quite a few other members of other governments. I so hope the corrupt members of our political system made use of this companies services. Not to mention the corrupt corporations, and rich jack asses who launder money to avoid paying taxes.

From the sounds it the news agencies have barely scratched the surface. This one has the potential to expose lots of powerful people. Unfortunately if enough powerful people are caught up in this then I doubt very few prison sentences will result, and the ones that do will just get a week in some cushy jail.

I so enjoy when the corrupt members of the rich and powerful are caught:

 
Good.

The worst are those in government who advocate people pay their "fair share" (as determined by them), but don't do it themselves.
Those are the lowest pieces of shit.

All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.


And the leader of Iceland resigned? That's bound to cause ripples nowhere.
 

Rey C.

Racing is life... anything else is just waiting.
The most interesting name that I've seen so far is Formula One driver Nico Rosberg. But I suspect there could be some real fallout if any prominent U.S. politicians show up. I'll be genuinely surprised if the Clintons, or some entity connected to them, aren't in there. You simply cannot go from being broke to having a combined net worth of over $100 million in a few short years without some shady dealings going on.
 
The most interesting name that I've seen so far is Formula One driver Nico Rosberg. But I suspect there could be some real fallout if any prominent U.S. politicians show up. I'll be genuinely surprised if the Clintons, or some entity connected to them, aren't in there. You simply cannot go from being broke to having a combined net worth of over $100 million in a few short years without some shady dealings going on.

alg-powerball-ticket-jpg.jpg
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
Good.

The worst are those in government who advocate people pay their "fair share" (as determined by them), but don't do it themselves.
Those are the lowest pieces of shit.


Agreed, most taxes need to go. I would hide my money if I had the opportunity.
 
There are dozens of other countries that are tax free havens for rich people.
Wouldn't surprise me if Trump had money in some of those countries.

Rich people don't go to jail, they pay off the right people in positions of power, then go off to a sunny beach resort for a few months until everyone forgets about it.


See Charles Rangel.

He never served a day in jail for evading taxes but was given a verbally reprimanded and denounced by a House panel.

:rubbel:
 

Luxman

#TRE45ON
There are dozens of other countries that are tax free havens for rich people.
Wouldn't surprise me if Trump had money in some of those countries.

Rich people don't go to jail, they pay off the right people in positions of power, then go off to a sunny beach resort for a few months until everyone forgets about it.
 
Impeach Obama !
Err... I mean Cameron. Impeach David Cameron !


David Cameron admits he profited from father's Panama offshore trust


England's PM sold stake in Blairmore investment fund, which featured in Panama Papers, for £31,500 four months before entering No 10


David Cameron has finally admitted he benefited from a Panama-based offshore trust set up by his late father.

After three days of stalling and four partial statements issued by Downing Street he confessed that he owned shares in the tax haven fund, which he sold for £31,500 just before becoming prime minister in 2010.

In a specially arranged interview with ITV News’ Robert Peston he confirmed a direct link to his father’s UK-tax avoiding fund, details of which were exposed in the Panama Papers revelations in the Guardian this week.

Admitting it had been “a difficult few days”, the prime minister said he held the shares together with his wife, Samantha, from 1997 and during his time as leader of the opposition. They were sold in January 2010 for a profit of £19,000.

He paid income tax on the dividends but there was no capital gains tax payable and he said he sold up before entering Downing Street “because I didn’t want anyone to say you have other agendas or vested interests”.

But the interview appeared unlikely to end scrutiny of Cameron’s tax affairs.

The Labour MP John Mann, a member of the Treasury select committee, said the prime minister should resign, claiming that Cameron had “covered up and misled”.

Cameron also admitted he did not know whether the £300,000 he inherited from his father had benefited from tax haven status due to part of his estate being based in a unit trust in Jersey.

“I obviously can’t point to the source of every bit of money and dad’s not around for me to ask the questions now,” Cameron said.

It was the fifth explanation in four days from Cameron and his aides about the benefits he and his family had enjoyed from the offshore fund.

Downing Street initially insisted it was a private matter, but Cameron then said he had “no shares, no offshore trusts, no offshore funds”. His spokesman later clarified: “The prime minister, his wife and their children do not benefit from any offshore funds.”

Downing Street then said there were no offshore funds or trusts the family would benefit from in future, leaving questions about the past.

In his first interview on the topic after days of stonewalling, Cameron was questioned on whether there was a conflict of interest between his father setting up the Panama-based Blairmore Investment Trust, which did not have to pay UK tax on its profits, and his professed policy to crack down on aggressive tax avoidance.

“Rules have changed, culture has changed,” he said. “And I welcome that. I want to be as clear as I can about the past, about the present, about the future, because frankly, I don’t have anything to hide.”

Earlier Cameron had refused to take questions from the press while campaigning in Exeter for Britain to stay in the EU. A student managed to address him, saying: “I am very interested in what the collective EU states could do to combat tax avoidance – something you have personal experience of.”

Speaking about his personal wealth, Cameron told Peston: “In all of this I’ve never hidden the fact that I’m a very lucky person who had wealthy parents, who gave me a great upbringing, who paid for me to go to an amazing school. I have never tried to pretend to be anything I am not. But I was keen in 2010 to sell everything – shares, all the rest of it – so I can be very transparent. I don’t own any part of any company or any investment trust or anything else like that.”

He also said it was a misconception that Blairmore had been set up to avoid tax. “It wasn’t,” he said. “It was set up after exchange controls went so that people who wanted to invest in dollar denominated shares and companies could do so.”

Richard Burgon, the shadow Treasury minister, said Cameron’s admission showed a “crisis of morals” at the heart of the Conservative government.

He said: “After four days of refusing to answer this question David Cameron has now finally been forced to admit he directly benefited from Blairmore, a company which paid no tax in 30 years. He must now further clarify whether or not he or his family were benefiting directly or indirectly in 2013 when he was lobbying to prevent EU measures to better regulate trusts as a way to clamp down on tax avoidance.

“David Cameron needs to properly put the record straight in full on this matter and issue a statement to parliament on Monday. We can’t let this crisis of morals at the heart of the Conservative government further undermine public trust in the office of prime minister or the principle that those who govern us should pay their tax like the rest of us.”

The Panama Papers were leaked to the German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, which shared them with the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, the Guardian, BBC and other media organisations. Four days into the ******* of revelations, regulators stepped up their response.

Twenty banks and financial firms in London have been told to disclose their dealings with Mossack Fonseca to the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority by Friday next week in a first step that could potentially see wrongdoing punished with heavy fines. It cited the need for financial institutions “to mitigate the risk that they might be used to commit financial crime”.

In Geneva, the Swiss chief prosecutor, Olivier Jornot, said he had launched an undisclosed number of investigations and said his office was paying very close attention to new information as it emerged.

In Brussels, the EU tax commissioner, Pierre Moscovici, threatened “to hit [tax havens] with appropriate sanctions if they refuse to change”.

He added: “The amounts of money, the jurisdictions and the names associated with this affair are frankly shocking. If these leaks reveal that any EU laws have been broken the commission will not hesitate to act.”

The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, dismissed revelations about a network of offshore deals worth $2bn involving members of his close circle, as a conspiracy to undermine Russia.

Responding for the first time on Thursday, he claimed the reports were “one more attempt to destabilise the internal situation [and] make us more accommodating”.

He said in St Petersburg: “Your humble servant was not there [named in the files], but they don’t talk about that. So what did they do? They make an information product – they found acquaintances and friends.”

China, meanwhile, stepped up its efforts to stop its population reading revelations that showed that relatives of three of the seven members of the Communist party’s elite ruling council, including relatives of the president, Xi Jinping, had companies that were clients of Mossack Fonseca.

The Guardian’s coverage of the Panama papers was blocked to internet users not on a special secure network. The Communist party reportedly told news organisations to “self-inspect and delete all content related to the ‘Panama Papers’ leak”.

It was announced that the Argentinian president, Mauricio Macri, was facing an investigation into his financial dealings via two offshore firms that appeared in the files. The federal prosecutor, Federico Delgado, opened an investigation to find out if Macri, who denies wrongdoing, failed to declare assets as required by public officials.
http://www.theguardian.com/news/201...-profited-fathers-offshore-fund-panama-papers
 

Luxman

#TRE45ON
"But Mr. Zucman, who estimates that about 8 percent of the world’s financial wealth — more than $7.6 trillion — is hidden in offshore accounts, said another reason was that it is so simple to create anonymous shell companies within the United States."

That's about $1000 for every person on earth, in most countries that's a fortune.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/08/b...ncome-you-dont-have-to-go-to-panama.html?_r=0
 

Luxman

#TRE45ON

Supafly

Retired Mod
Bronze Member
I bet they held the best back for the better timing. Upcoming elections will work out far different if the news about the candidates are just out days before the ballots open.
 
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