Isle of Man [IOM] firms on HMRC list tax avoidance schemes, promoters, enablers and suppliers
20/01/2023
HMRC has updated its list of named tax avoidance schemes, promoters, enablers and suppliers
This list is presented in alphabetical order, updated regularly, and includes the following IOM firms.
- Howe Consultancy Limited (Incorporated in the Isle of Man) - see Charteris Management Ltd
- Novus Consultants Limited (formerly Novus Limited) (Incorporated in the Isle of Man) / Contractor Corner Accounting Limited
- Omni Contractors PCC Limited (Incorporated in Isle of Man) - see Saxonside Limited - Saxonside Share Growth and Focus Contractor Limited - Share Growth
- Taurus Limited (Incorporated in the Isle of Man) - see Charteris Management Ltd
- Able Ltd (incorporated in Isle of Man) / Contractor Central Accounting Ltd (CCAL)
The most recent update was on 19 January 2023, with the addition of:
- Able Ltd,
- AML Tax (UK) Limited,
- Contractor Central Accounting Ltd,
- Denmedical UK Limited and
- Tailored UK Services Ltd.
HMRC LIST
READ MORE ABOUT AML Tax (UK) Limited,
- HMRC names AML Tax (UK) Limited & three schemes linked to Mone’s husband as tax avoidance
- AML Tax (UK) Limited, a company linked to the Knox Group, is linked to three tax avoidance schemes by HM Revenue and Customs.
- Douglas Barrowman, Lady Mone’s husband since they married on the Isle of Man in November 2020, is the founder and chairman of the Knox Group, a financial services and wealth management firm based on the island.
KEY FACTS
- Three payment programmes operated by AML Tax (UK) Limited, a company linked to the husband of the Conservative peer Michelle Mone are named as tax avoidance schemes by HM Revenue and Customs.
- Concerning the three AML schemes named this week, Mary Aiston, HMRC’s director of counter-avoidance, said:
- “These schemes are cynically marketed as clever ways to pay less tax.
- The truth is they rarely work in the way the promoters claim, and the users end up with big tax bills.
- HMRC will continue to use all the powers at our disposal to crack down on promoters.
- “Anyone who thinks they may be involved in a tax avoidance scheme, or have been approached by a scheme promoter, should contact us as soon as possible to get help.”
BACKGROUND - The Knox Group & AML Tax (UK) Ltd,
- HMRC said a Manchester-based company, AML Tax (UK) Ltd, which ran the three newly named tax avoidance schemes, was
- “a part of Doug Barrowman’s Isle of Man-based Knox Group”.
- HMRC won legal cases against AML last year under tax laws that require companies to notify HMRC of payment schemes that should be classified as tax avoidance schemes because one of the “main benefits” is to obtain a “tax advantage”.
- AML’s director, Arthur Lancaster, told the tax tribunal last year that
- AML was part of the Knox Group,
- together with other companies such as Knox House Trust, of which Lancaster was the chairman in 2019.
- In March, HMRC also won a separate legal case against AML, which was fined £150,000 after being found not to have provided details to the tax authority required by law. In this case,
- Lancaster was said by the tribunal to have been “evasive” and displayed “a lack of candour” in some of the evidence he gave.
- HMRC also linked AML to Barrowman’s Knox Group at that time, stating in a press release announcing the result of the case: “Doug Barrowman tax avoidance firm fined,” and saying:
- “A company which has aggressively promoted tax avoidance schemes in the UK for years has been fined £150,000 for failing to provide HMRC with the legally required information.
- Also, in relation to some of the evidence Lancaster gave in a different legal case, he was described as “disingenuous” and “increasingly evasive” by the tax tribunal judge Tracey Bowler, who classed two of the AML schemes as tax avoidance.
READ MORE
- “AML Tax (UK) Limited, directed by ARTHUR LANCASTER AND PART OF DOUG BARROWMAN’S Isle of Man based Knox Group, was fined £150,000 after HMRC brought an upper tribunal case over the firm’s failure to comply with formal information notices as part of a tax investigation.”
HMRC ACTIONS TO STOP TAX ABUSE
- A source at HMRC said its growing policy of publicly naming such schemes is part of a strategy aimed at deterring people from signing up for them, and ultimately driving the schemes out of business.
- The UK tax authority’s enforcement actions have attracted intense controversy in recent years because people working in relatively modestly paid jobs, who were paid through such schemes, have been hit with large bills after HMRC succeeded in establishing that insufficient tax had been paid.
- In its campaign, “Tax avoidance – don’t get caught out”, HMRC features a nurse and an IT project manager who signed up for schemes, not stated to be those of AML, that offered to maximise their take-home pay, but who were later subjected to large bills for tax that was avoided.
Source
- https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/named-tax-avoidance-schemes-promoters-enablers-and-suppliers/current-list-of-named-tax-avoidance-schemes-promoters-enablers-and-suppliers#aml-tax-uk-limited
- https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/amp.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jan/20/hmrc-names-three-schemes-linked-to-michelle-mone-husband-as-tax-avoidance
- David Conn
- Fri 20 Jan 2023 04.03 EST
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