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Previously on "New IR35 review procedures"

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  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by ratewhore View Post
    I believe there are a very large number of government officials who now have the right to enter your home without a warrant. It used to be just C & E...
    Speaking of which.

    Leave a comment:


  • Doggy Styles
    replied
    Originally posted by ratewhore View Post
    I believe there are a very large number of government officials who now have the right to enter your home without a warrant. It used to be just C & E...
    What about the five-a-day czar?

    Leave a comment:


  • ratewhore
    replied
    Originally posted by eliquant View Post
    yes, yet more of a freedoms taken away from us. Looks like now HMRC (not just Customs & Excise) will be able to kick your door down or at least make demands to enter your premises as of April 2009 (ok if you obstruct I think they have the 'right' to charge you £60 per day after the point of obstruction).

    I mean, I've got nothing to hide and any correspondance can be done via mail / solicitors so what on earth is this new law about ??
    I believe there are a very large number of government officials who now have the right to enter your home without a warrant. It used to be just C & E...

    Leave a comment:


  • threaded
    replied
    Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
    Hardly "New IR35 review procedures", is it?
    Warning: humour bypass alert!

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by BBC Website
    Last Updated: Thursday, 27 December 2007, 14:40 GMT
    Hardly "New IR35 review procedures", is it?

    Leave a comment:


  • Purple Dalek
    replied
    Originally posted by Bob Dalek View Post
    It's dark humour at it's best: £billions spent on Iraq & Afghanistan; £billions spent on the Olympic Games; £billions spent on dole-scrounging scum and other toerag offal; £billions/£trillions? on the Great Brown Rescue; and now a Gestapo-like "You can expect a knock on the door in the early hours." warning for folk in work during an economic crisis. Please tell me I am in a coma and simply dreaming.
    It has been said that this planet is simply another planets hell.

    Leave a comment:


  • stingman123
    replied
    Originally posted by Bob Dalek View Post
    It's dark humour at it's best: £billions spent on Iraq & Afghanistan; £billions spent on the Olympic Games; £billions spent on dole-scrounging scum and other toerag offal; £billions/£trillions? on the Great Brown Rescue; and now a Gestapo-like "You can expect a knock on the door in the early hours." warning for folk in work during an economic crisis. Please tell me I am in a coma and simply dreaming.


    Welcome, to the real world........

    Leave a comment:


  • Bob Dalek
    replied
    It's dark humour at its best: £billions spent on Iraq & Afghanistan; £billions spent on the Olympic Games; £billions spent on dole-scrounging scum and other toerag offal; £billions/£trillions? on the Great Brown Rescue; and now a Gestapo-like "You can expect a knock on the door in the early hours." warning for folk in work during an economic crisis. Please tell me I am in a coma and simply dreaming.
    Last edited by Bob Dalek; 21 November 2008, 10:15.

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded View Post
    In the next remake of Dune, Gordon Brown is going to play Baron Harkonnen

    Leave a comment:


  • eliquant
    replied
    yes, yet more of a freedoms taken away from us. Looks like now HMRC (not just Customs & Excise) will be able to kick your door down or at least make demands to enter your premises as of April 2009 (ok if you obstruct I think they have the 'right' to charge you £60 per day after the point of obstruction).

    I mean, I've got nothing to hide and any correspondance can be done via mail / solicitors so what on earth is this new law about ??

    Leave a comment:


  • threaded
    replied
    "I must not fear.
    Fear is the mind-killer.
    Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
    I will face my fear.
    I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
    And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
    Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.
    Only I will remain."

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Originally posted by _V_ View Post
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7156303.stm

    This is reserved for cases where HMRC needs to send a strong deterrent message, or where the conduct involved is such that only a criminal sanction is appropriate.

    Under any enquiry HMRC will charge the full amount of tax, and interest on the late paid tax.

    It is possible that the first indication of a criminal prosecution might be a knock at the front door during breakfast.

    The premises will be searched and it is possible that the person under investigation could be arrested and taken for interview under caution by the police.

    Such cases include:

    where the individual holds a position of trust or responsibility
    second offenders
    disguised employees (IR35)
    deliberate concealment and cases involving false or forged documents.
    Those cases may be prosecuted with a view to a jail sentence rather than the imposition of a civil penalty.
    you rotter,

    you put that in to frighten us didn't you

    Leave a comment:


  • Purple Dalek
    replied
    You'll never take me alive copper.

    Blam blam blam blam blam.

    Leave a comment:


  • _V_
    started a topic New IR35 review procedures

    New IR35 review procedures

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7156303.stm

    This is reserved for cases where HMRC needs to send a strong deterrent message, or where the conduct involved is such that only a criminal sanction is appropriate.

    Under any enquiry HMRC will charge the full amount of tax, and interest on the late paid tax.

    It is possible that the first indication of a criminal prosecution might be a knock at the front door during breakfast.

    The premises will be searched and it is possible that the person under investigation could be arrested and taken for interview under caution by the police.

    Such cases include:

    where the individual holds a position of trust or responsibility
    second offenders
    disguised employees (IR35)
    deliberate concealment and cases involving false or forged documents.
    Those cases may be prosecuted with a view to a jail sentence rather than the imposition of a civil penalty.

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