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View Full Version : Tax credits 'targeted by gangs'



ShadesWolf
10-30-2005, 14:28
I dont think I need to comment


Organised fraudsters are taking advantage of the UK's tax credit system, BBC News has learned.
Tax credits are intended to help people on low incomes or with families.

But they have been widely criticised for frequently paying out too much money, then clawing it back - often leaving families in financial trouble.

The culture of overpayment has left the system wide open to abuse by gangs who usually engage in benefit fraud, police sources have told BBC News.

'Low-hanging fruit'

Overall, the tax credit system paid out £13.8bn in the financial year which finished in April 2005.

No figure is available for the proportion which was overpaid that year - either through error or fraud.

But for 2003-4, according to the House of Commons Treasury Select Committee which is investigating tax credits, £2.2bn was overpaid.

Now, though, concern is building that organised crime is starting to see tax credits as a low-risk, high-reward form of fraud, using false or stolen documents and applying for credits from internet cafes.

They then disappear before repayment can be demanded - leaving honest claimants to bear the brunt of overpayment recoveries.

"Organised crime goes after the low-hanging fruit," one senior police officer told BBC News.

"Tax credits rely on paying the money out then recovering it - and that's the weakness they can exploit."

Banks and building societies were reporting increasing fears that money linked to this kind of scam was being laundered through their accounts, the officer said.

Financial institutions, for their part, say they are keen to co-operate on this kind of fraud investigation - and swap information with each other to try to shut out serial fraudsters.

But the institutions are not allowed to share that data with government departments unless they specifically ask for it, one private sector fraud investigator told the BBC.

'Robust measures'

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), the government department responsible for tax credits, said that organised gangs had tried to take on the system.

"But we have robust measures in place to combat such criminal behaviour," an HMRC spokesman said.

"We regularly share information with other agencies and have highly developed safeguards to detect fraud, analyse trends and ensure that our security systems are constantly being strengthened."

The National Audit Office's annual review of HMRC, published earlier in October, found that more than 80% of investigations into possible fraud or error were carried out after an award had been made because "information on some risks was not available at (the pre-award) stage".

HMRC was now putting more effort into pre-award inquiries and was rethinking the resources targeted at serious fraud, it said.

The NAO report continued: "The department have evidence that tax credits have been targeted by organised criminals, particularly where they can make claims over the internet without providing identity.

"The department's Internal Audit Office concluded that there was a lack of comprehensive information to allow a robust analysis of the problem."

HMRC's Special Compliance Office - which normally deals with suspicions of high-value tax evasion or fraud - had intended to deal with any fraud case worth more than £1,500, the NAO said.

But it warned that the office had been swamped, and had passed the cases back to local tax offices.

Taffy_is_a_Taff
10-30-2005, 20:56
shocking.

God bless the Labour Party.

JAG
10-31-2005, 04:03
Brilliant policy bringing much needed help to those who the Tories don't give a Duck about.

Every policy has hiccups, it doesn't make the policy wrong, merely implemented wrong. You can be against the problems that there have been with the policy, but to be against the policy is disgusting.

Who said Labour are the same as the Tories? The Tories will always be morally bankrupt.

Crazed Rabbit
10-31-2005, 04:55
It's not 'hiccups' it's problems inherent in the type of programs that labour runs. They give away money willy-nilly, and people will always try to take advatage of it. Since labour cares more about giving other people's money away than actually improving conditions, this sort of thing will always happen.

Crazed Rabbit

ShadesWolf
10-31-2005, 05:11
£2.2bn was overpaid

Nice bit of champagne socialism

~:cheers: hiccup,hiccup

Yet another example of a policy not thought through, and a rush job implementing it. Role on ID cards.......... ~:confused:



The Tories will always be morally bankrupt

but they do try to balance the books. If you havent got the money you cant spend it. Taxation is not the answer. How can a government talk about creating jobs when they now have 25% of allpeople employed working as civil servants etc...... What benifits do these paper pushers give apart from allowing labour to say unemployment is down.......

GonZ
10-31-2005, 18:23
Tax Credits may or may not be a bad idea.

But the problem here would appear to be the organised gangs of criminals that are defrauding the system.

The parasites that perpetrate benefit fraud need to be found, caught, prosecuted then exiled.

yesdachi
10-31-2005, 18:26
The parasites that perpetrate benefit fraud need to be found, caught, prosecuted then exiled.
Exiled? Their yours, you keep um.~;)