LHDN uncovers tax non-compliance linked to luxury vehicle cartel


PUTRAJAYA: The Inland Revenue Board (LHDN) has uncovered tax non-compliance by a company suspected of being involved in a luxury vehicle cartel network, including failure to declare actual income from sales transactions amounting to approximately RM70mil.

LHDN said in a statement on Tuesday (Nov 18) that it conducted an enforcement operation against the company the previous day, involving several locations in the Klang Valley.

These included the company's business premises, the residence of its director, and an auditing firm.

"Through this operation, searches were conducted to obtain documents and evidence related to tax non-compliance.

"Initial investigations revealed that the company failed to report actual income from sales transactions amounting to RM70mil,” it said.

The case is now being investigated under subsection 112(1A) of the Income Tax Act 1967, involving the company, and paragraph 113(1)(a) of the Act, involving the company’s directors, it added.

"(This operation) is in line with the government’s efforts to combat cartels and smuggling syndicates, which have been entrenched for decades to the detriment of national revenue,” it said.

LHDN also stressed that, among the tax evasion cases currently under investigation and those that will be prosecuted are matters involving gold mining activities, scams, misuse of welfare status to conceal transactions, gambling proceeds, other illegal activities, as well as businesses owned by foreigners which have failed to declare income.

"This step demonstrates LHDN’s continued commitment to ensuring that every party complies with tax regulations, and to curbing leakages in national revenue.

"Therefore, it remains firm in upholding the integrity of the country’s tax system, and will not compromise with any attempt to evade taxes. It will ensure that all parties fulfil their tax obligations, for the well-being of the nation and its people,” it said.

Meanwhile, LHDN chief executive officer Datuk Dr Abu Tariq Jamaluddin, when contacted, confirmed the operation, noting that it forms part of the board's targeted efforts to strengthen tax compliance, particularly in sectors involving high-value transactions such as luxury vehicles.

"Non-compliance involving large sums not only undermines national revenue, but also compromises the fairness of the tax system, and should not be taken lightly,” he said. – Bernama

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Nation

INTERACTIVE: Four Malaysian durian varieties registered, international protection needed
INTERACTIVE: Sabah, Sarawak lead in protected products
Accident strengthens call for workers’ protection
Fadillah orders probe into power plant incident that killed two workers
‘Shui’ is Chinese character of the year
Ministry reduces teachers’ workload
Stronger ringgit welcomed
Homemaker sells prized Pokemon cards for Gaza cause
Cabinet picks ‘when time is right’
Tawau water villagers jump into the sea to escape raging fire

Others Also Read