Originally posted by LaurieDriver
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HMRC enquiries for Talent Resource Management (TRM) / Cherrylon / Trentburg Schemes
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Why is this allowed ??
So can some one please enlighten me why the likes of the Moss family, Mr James Jonathan Moss, Mr Craig Darren Moss & Mr Anthony Moss, who were all part of Talent Resources Ltd are <mod snip>?
One of them must have incorporated the company ?? Including any one of their pay scheme's, and their advice agencies who advised many contractors that this was a safe way to get your money.
They are allowed to dissolve one company when the going gets tuff and go on and form new companies doing exactly the same thing ?? its absolutely crazy <mod snip> they took payment, they charged interest on loans that i know was paid .....HMRC should be going to TRM or the new incarnation which is futurelinkgroup & TT-Intelligence (https://ww w.futurelinkgroup.co.uk).. You try emailing them !! you try contacting them via their web portal... <mod snip>
If you use TT-Intelligence, real name TOTAL TAX INTELLIGENCE LIMITED you will be speaking to the same people you spoke to when you dealt with TRM, its the same god dam family.. https://suitedotendole.co.uk/insight...igence-limited
what is anyone doing about this then ???
https://suitedotendole.co.uk/insight...-group-limited
Rant over
Originally posted by ContractorSeven View PostIt seems it's a Moss family business. My contact at TRM was Craig Moss, and it appears their dad (presumably, given Anthony Moss' date of birth) is on it too.Comment
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Read this post. https://forums.contractoruk.com/hmrc...ml#post2577201"I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...Comment
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TRM loans and currency conversions
Having worked through TRM for about 18 months around 2006 I received the letters transferring the loans to Redding around 2008, as I'm sure many people did. There was then some thing were they were converted to Zimbabwe dollars and, thanks to that currency crashing, became worthless.
I have a signed letter from them saying that the loan is paid off. The Loan Charge then, in theory, doesn't apply and because the loan wasn't written off there's no tax liability.
I have no way of knowing whether Redding did the currency conversion or not. Maybe they didn't, but I had no part in it. I would be interested to know what grounds HRMC have for getting money from me and not TRM/Redding. Maybe they should chase Redding for fraud? I can't see how that's my problem.
Has anyone in a similar situation looked into it?Comment
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Originally posted by ContractorSeven View PostHaving worked through TRM for about 18 months around 2006 I received the letters transferring the loans to Redding around 2008, as I'm sure many people did. There was then some thing were they were converted to Zimbabwe dollars and, thanks to that currency crashing, became worthless.
I have a signed letter from them saying that the loan is paid off. The Loan Charge then, in theory, doesn't apply and because the loan wasn't written off there's no tax liability.
I have no way of knowing whether Redding did the currency conversion or not. Maybe they didn't, but I had no part in it. I would be interested to know what grounds HRMC have for getting money from me and not TRM/Redding. Maybe they should chase Redding for fraud? I can't see how that's my problem.
Has anyone in a similar situation looked into it?
Unfortunately the loan charge explicitly mentions depreciating currencies. It completely ignores the depreciation - nice eh? So for the loan charge purposes if the events are as follows:
2001 Loan Made in 100,000 ZWD (say £50k)
2005 ZWD depreciates so 100,000 ZWD = £100
2006 Trust writes off £100 loan balance
2007 Trust closes
All years closed
Loan charge legislation says £50k loans "outstanding" in 2018/19 - because they only consider cash repayments in GBP and ignore both write off and trust closing. It's totally mental!
Edit - oh and Mel Stride keeps repeating we can repay the loans ... er .. how ... to who .. there is (a) no 'real' outstanding balance and (b) nobody to repay even if there was!Last edited by starstruck; 16 September 2018, 16:23.Comment
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Originally posted by ContractorSeven View PostHaving worked through TRM for about 18 months around 2006 I received the letters transferring the loans to Redding around 2008, as I'm sure many people did. There was then some thing were they were converted to Zimbabwe dollars and, thanks to that currency crashing, became worthless.
I have a signed letter from them saying that the loan is paid off. The Loan Charge then, in theory, doesn't apply and because the loan wasn't written off there's no tax liability.
I have no way of knowing whether Redding did the currency conversion or not. Maybe they didn't, but I had no part in it. I would be interested to know what grounds HRMC have for getting money from me and not TRM/Redding. Maybe they should chase Redding for fraud? I can't see how that's my problem.
Has anyone in a similar situation looked into it?Comment
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To the best of my knowledge:
The loan charge does not care if a trust was used. It simply asks if a loan was made and cares not about the status of the lender.
The loan charge deals specifically with foreign currency loans.
TRM did not use a trust.
My guess is that if you took a loan in Jupiter Zols to a value of £1,000 sterling and later repaid £5 sterling, then the loan charge will be on £995.Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.
(No, me neither).Comment
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In the case of TRM the loans were issued in sterling. They were then internally (and years later) within TRM, without any instruction or knowledge from the recipients of the loans, converted to Zimbabwe Dollars and the sterling value subsequently reduced.
I doubt if it makes any difference to HMRC and the loan charge, but it's a different situation to every other 'foreign currency' loan scheme I've seen. It would be interesting if it ever went to court.Comment
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Originally posted by webberg View PostTo the best of my knowledge:
The loan charge does not care if a trust was used. It simply asks if a loan was made and cares not about the status of the lender.
The loan charge deals specifically with foreign currency loans.
TRM did not use a trust.
My guess is that if you took a loan in Jupiter Zols to a value of £1,000 sterling and later repaid £5 sterling, then the loan charge will be on £995.Comment
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