The German government is currently considering the purchase of a data CD with information on 1500 potential tax-evaders.
The problem: the data has been illegaly obtained by the informant who is now offering it for sale

German government weighs up moral dilemma over Swiss tax-dodge secrets
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Germany politicans are grappling with the thorny question of whether to buy information on possible tax-evaders with Swiss Bank accounts. Switzerland warns that politicians would be doing business with criminals.

Politicians in Germany are trying to decide on the legality and morality of buying a stolen CD containing data of 1,500 possible tax-evaders with Swiss accounts.
The moral questions raised have prompted debate from all sides of the political spectrum with Switzerland warning that buying the CD would be illegal.
"Generally speaking we believe that it is difficult for states to use illegal data," said Swiss President Doris Leuthard. "This would mean doing business with criminals, which is against the law."
An informant is asking for 2.5 million euros ($3.5 million) for the confidential data, according to the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Tax investigators believe the information could bring in as much 100 million euros for the government.

Questions of legality

A senior ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel, Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, said the government would need to check the legal validity of the data.
"I have a problem with handing over money for something that has come into someone's possession in a legally questionable fashion," Guttenberg told Swiss daily Neue Zuercher Zeitung.
But Greens and Social Democrats have encouraged the government to buy the data on behalf of "honest taxpayers."
Some politicians from Chancellor Merkel's Christian Democrat party have also called for the purchase of the CD to be considered. Lower Saxony’s finance minister, Hartmut Moellring said in an interview with radio station Deutschlandfunk that he had no objection to buying it, provided that the information could be used in court.
"If the state gets information on tax evaders, it must pursue them," said Moellring. "It’s a question of justice."

Hot in the press

Both the Allgemeine Zeitung and Sueddeutsche Zeitung first reported on the offer. Officials in Berlin confirmed the reports on Saturday.
The informant reportedly handed over information on five individuals to prove the data's validity.
Both newspapers reported the data was offered to tax officials in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
The Financial Times Deutschland reported on Monday that the data had come from a computer specialist at an HSBC private bank in Geneva.

rc/acb/AFP/dpa
Editor: Rob Turner


I have to admit I am very much on the fence regarding this issue. I have little sympathy for the tax evaders who would get caught if the government buys the data and it would certainly be a good "investment".
OTOH, buying data from some greedy criminal stinks. This is not a question of national security and the government might be better advised to catch tax-evaders the legal way (investing in the required manpower is AFAIK still provides a good ROI), so I am somewhat leaning towards not buying it.

What do other people think?