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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 19 November 2024

Big GST evaders face action

Launching of prosecution by taxmen means commencement of legal proceedings against the offender

Our Special Correspondent New Delhi Published 03.09.22, 01:17 AM
The instruction further said that where arrests have been made during the course of an investigation, and no bail has been granted, all efforts should be made to file prosecution complaint in the court within 60 days of arrest.

The instruction further said that where arrests have been made during the course of an investigation, and no bail has been granted, all efforts should be made to file prosecution complaint in the court within 60 days of arrest. File picture

The finance ministry on Friday said the GST officers can now start prosecuting offenders in cases where the amount of evasion or misuse of input tax credit is more than Rs 5 crore.

However, this monetary threshold will not be applicable in the case of habitual evaders or in cases where arrests have been made at the time of investigation.

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“One of the important considerations for deciding whether prosecution should be started is the availability of adequate evidence,” the GST investigation wing under the finance ministry said, while issuing instructions for launching prosecution.

Prosecution should normally be launched where the amount of tax evasion, or misuse of ITC, or fraudulently obtained refund is more than Rs 5 crore, it said.

Launching of prosecution by taxmen means commencement of legal proceedings against the offender.

This limit will not apply and prosecution can be launched in the case of a company/taxpayer habitually involved in tax evasion or who misuses the input tax credit (ITC) facility or fraudulently obtained refund.

“A company/taxpayer would be treated as a habitual evader if it has been involved in two or more cases of confirmed demand (at the first adjudication level or above) of tax evasion/fraudulent refund or misuse of ITC involving fraud, suppression of facts in the past two years such that the total tax evaded exceeds Rs 5 crore. DIGIT database may be used to identify such habitual evaders,” the CBIC said.

The instruction further said that where arrests have been made during the course of an investigation, and no bail has been granted, all efforts should be made to file prosecution complaint in the court within 60 days of arrest.

In all the other cases of arrest, prosecution complaint should also be filed within a definite time frame.

A decision should be taken on a case-to-case basis considering various factors such as, nature and gravity of offence, quantum of tax evaded, or ITC wrongly availed, or refund wrongly taken and the nature as well as quality of evidence collected, the guidelines for launching prosecution said.

AMRG & Associates senior partner Rajat Mohan said the guidelines have elucidated numerous practical scenarios related to procedural aspects of launching prosecution, arrests cases, withdrawal of prosecution, publication of names of persons convicted and compounding of offences.

This will pave the way for a good and simple tax, he said.

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