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TAXES

Denmark pays for Panama Papers data on own citizens

The Danish tax authority Skat said on Thursday it had paid an anonymous source almost six million kroner (€0.81 million, $0.9 million) for leaked data from the Panama Papers on hundreds of Danes.

Denmark pays for Panama Papers data on own citizens
Skat justified the purchase by saying it needed to crack down on tax evaders. Photo: Erik Refner/Scanpix
The government justified the payment earlier this month saying it needed to take all necessary measures to catch tax evaders.
 
“The material contains the number of files on Danes that we expected and the quality is on a par with the sample cases we were given before,” Jim Sørensen, a division head at the agency, said in a statement.
 
The agency would now analyse the material in more detail, he said.
 
The Danish government said on September 7th that it would pay an amount in the “lower millions” of kroner to the anonymous source for information on between 500 and 600 Danish taxpayers from the Panama Papers.
 
The decision comes as the tax agency continues to reel from a fraud scandal that cost it at least 12.3 billion kroner ($1.9 billion, €1.7 billion). 
 
In April, media outlets published details of murky offshore financial dealings gleaned from 11.5 million leaked documents from a Panamanian law firm — the so-called “Panama Papers”.
 
The leaks saw a host of high-profile politicians, celebrities and sports stars embarrassed over their assets in tax havens.

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