UK legislators made several versions of this argument to oppose amendments to the 2017 Criminal Finances Bill which would have mandated direct legislation to establish public beneficial ownership registers in the British Overseas Territories (OTs). And when earlier this year the UK Parliament finally passed such a measure – which is still being fought by several OT administrations – their lobbyists and advocates similarly argued that the OT’s provision of information to law enforcement puts them beyond reproach, or need of reform
'Marvellous': $2.6m tax cheat known for his generosity by Patrick Begley
Did the FBI have access to the Panama Papers?
Jack Goldsmith on cybersecurity and international law
…the U.S. intelligence services break into computers and computer networks abroad at an astounding rate, certainly on a greater scale than any other intelligence service in the world.
How will the United States respond when Russia and China and Iran start naming and indicting U.S. officials? Maybe the United States thinks its concealment techniques are so good that the type of detailed attribution it made against the Russians is infeasible. (The Shadow Brokers revealed the identities of specific NSA operators, so even if the National Security Agency is great at concealment as a matter of tradecraft that is no protection against an insider threat.) Maybe Russia and China and Iran won’t bother indicting U.S. officials unless and until the indictments actually materialize into a trial, which they likely never will. But what is the answer in principle? And what is the U.S. policy (if any) that is being communicated to military and civilian operators who face this threat? What is the U.S. government response to former NSA official Jake Williams, who worked in Tailored Access Operations and who presumably spoke for many others at NSA when he said that “charging military/gov hackers is dumb and WILL eventually hurt the US”?
Jack Goldsmith on cybersecurity and international law
…the U.S. intelligence services break into computers and computer networks abroad at an astounding rate, certainly on a greater scale than any other intelligence service in the world.How will the United States respond when Russia and China and Iran start naming and indicting U.S. officials? Maybe the United States thinks its concealment techniques are so good that the type of detailed attribution it made against the Russians is infeasible. (The Shadow Brokers revealed the identities of specific NSA operators, so even if the National Security Agency is great at concealment as a matter of tradecraft that is no protection against an insider threat.) Maybe Russia and China and Iran won’t bother indicting U.S. officials unless and until the indictments actually materialize into a trial, which they likely never will. But what is the answer in principle? And what is the U.S. policy (if any) that is being communicated to military and civilian operators who face this threat? What is the U.S. government response to former NSA official Jake Williams, who worked in Tailored Access Operations and who presumably spoke for many others at NSA when he said that “charging military/gov hackers is dumb and WILL eventually hurt the US”?
DOJ Report of the Attorney General’s Cyber Digital Task Force
United States Department of Justice, Office of the Deputy Attorney General, Cyber-Digital Task Force Report. July 2, 2018.
“In February 2018, the Attorney General established a Cyber-Digital
Task Force within the Department and directed the Task Force to answer
two basic, foundational questions: How is the Department responding to
cyber threats? And how can federal law enforcement more effectively
accomplish its mission in this important and rapidly evolving area? This
report addresses the frst question. It begins by focusing on one of the
most pressing cyber-enabled threats our Nation faces: the threat posed
by malign foreign influence operations. Chapter 1 explains what foreign
influence operations are, and how hostile foreign actors have used these
operations to target our Nation’s democratic processes, including our
elections. This chapter concludes by describing the Department’s
protective efforts with respect to the upcoming 2018 midterm elections,
and announces a new Department policy—grounded in our longstanding
principles of political neutrality, adherence to the rule of law, and
safeguarding the public trust—that governs the disclosure of foreign
influence operations. Chapters 2 and 3 discuss other cyber-enabled
threats our Nation faces, particularly those connected with cybercrimes.
These chapters describe the resources the Department is deploying to
confront those threats, and how our efforts further the rule of law in
this country and around the world. Chapter 4 focuses on a critical
aspect of the Department’s mission, in which the Federal Bureau of
Investigation plays a lead role: responding to cyber incidents. Chapter 5
then turns the lens inward, focusing on the Department’s efforts to
recruit and train our own personnel on cyber matters. Finally, the
report concludes in Chapter 6 with thoughts and observations about
certain priority policy matters, and charts a path for the Task Force’s
future work. Over the next few months, the Department will build upon
this initial report’s findings, and will provide recommendations to the
Attorney General for how the Department can even more efciently manage
the growing global cyber challenge.”
Inc., Burger King Takes on the Pink Tax and It's Brilliant: Would You Pay Twice As Much For "Chick Fries"?:
Michaelia Cash defends crackdown on fake R&D
Michaelia Cash says Bill Ferris R&D grants being withheld to balance the budget -
Chronicle of Philanthropy: How the IRS’s Stance on Donor Disclosure Corrupts the Nonprofit World, by Roger Colinvaux (Catholic):
Following up on my previous post, For Wealthy Americans, There Will Never Be A Better Time To Get Divorced Due To New GOP Tax Law: New York Times, Should You Get a Divorce Now or Later?:
Lawyers
and accountants often push their clients to plan for unpleasant events.
Better to be prepared now than to pay the consequences later. But the
Republican tax law that took effect in January has added a new urgency
for wealthy Americans contemplating divorce.
Have
you heard of the "pink tax"--a term for the routine practice of
charging more for products and services targeted to women than those
targeted to men? If not, you will soon. Though the term's been around
for years, and the practice itself has existed from the earliest days of
commerce, both have gained more prominence lately. That's thanks to a
study showing just how common it is, and a bill introduced in the House
to make gender-based pricing illegal. Now, Burger King has gotten into
the act in a very witty way.
Michaelia Cash defends crackdown on fake R&D
Michaelia Cash says Bill Ferris R&D grants being withheld to balance the budget -
Chronicle of Philanthropy: How the IRS’s Stance on Donor Disclosure Corrupts the Nonprofit World, by Roger Colinvaux (Catholic):
The Internal Revenue Service made clear last week just how broken federal oversight of nonprofits has become when it announced that nonprofits (other than charities) no longer need to tell the agency the names of people who give $5,000 or more.
- Cayman
Islands Tax Haven Is Third-Largest Foreign Investor in Israel
(31 Jul 2018)
- EU Split on Using Company Transparency Rules to Blacklist Tax Havens (31 Jul 2018)
- Why don’t countries want to tax Amazon? (Part 1) (31 Jul 2018)
- Why
don’t countries want to tax Amazon? (Part 2) (31 Jul 2018)
- Did the FBI have access to the Panama Papers? (31 Jul 2018)
- HMRC:
Loan scheme tax loophole that replaced income with loans closed
(31 Jul 2018)
- Carbon
pricing proposals tax US politicians and theorists
(31 Jul 2018)
- Global Witness Report - The Companies We Keep (31 Jul 2018)
- GROUNDBREAKING ANALYSIS OF THE OWNERS OF UK COMPANIES UNCOVERS SERIOUS MONEY LAUNDERING RISKS (31 Jul 2018)
- Trump administration considers another tax cut for wealthy (31 Jul 2018)
-
Trump Administration Mulls a Unilateral Tax Cut for the Rich(31 Jul 2018)
- HMRC increases tax receipts from the ultra-rich (31 Jul 2018)
- Gillibrand's
Financial Transactions Tax: A Retread of Bad Ideas (31 Jul
2018)
- You won't find a free lunch by clamping down on tax havens (31 Jul 2018)
- Ninth Circuit Decision For IRS Affects Shifting Of Income To Tax Havens (31 Jul 2018)
- Corporate penalties dropped as much as 94% under Trump, study says (26 Jul 2018)
- Hammond urged to cut tax relief on pensions contributions (26 Jul 2018)
- HMRC off the hook for up to £5 billion in tax refunds (26 Jul 2018)
- UK Supreme Court judgment in Prudential Assurance Company Ltd v HMRC (26 Jul 2018)
-
Cristiano Ronaldo receives two-year prison sentence and £17m fine(26 Jul 2018)
- Trends
and determinants in Chinese FDI in Africa (26 Jul
2018)
- Germany planning crackdown on online tax evasion (26 Jul 2018)
- Russian tax havens welcome oligarchs (26 Jul 2018)
- How tax havens turn FDI economic statistics into nonsense (26 Jul 2018)
- Netherlands
becoming FDI 'round tripping' haven like
Mauritius (26 Jul 2018)
- Global Witness: Scots 'tax haven' firms still mired in secrecy (25 Jul 2018)