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CRIME

Paying for info on tax dodgers is immoral

Buying stolen Swiss information on rich tax dodgers is wrong and puts Germany on shaky moral ground, argues Kai Biermann from Zeit Online.

Paying for info on tax dodgers is immoral
Photo: DPA

Should the state pay for illegally obtained data if it can be used to claw back hefty sum of tax money? It might be the pragmatic thing to do, but that doesn’t make it the moral path to take.

Anyone who engages in tax evasion harms society. The state must not tolerate such behaviour, which is why German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble is planning to buy stolen information on tax dodgers who have hidden their money illegally in Switzerland.

Society must protect itself against harm. That is indisputable. Otherwise its very existence would be in doubt. This is, for instance, why we have the police.

But how far does this need for protection go?

Denunciation of criminal acts – universally defined and declared – is a traditional role for authorities, along with knowing when the law is being violated and, equally, promoting people’s willingness to report crimes by offering incentives. Rewards are regularly offered for “helpful information” to help solve crimes.

Germany’s railway operator, for example, pays people up to €600 for reporting vandals caught spraying graffiti. Thus they try to avert harm from that otherwise would affect everybody.

In times past, it was called a bounty put on someone’s head to encourage others to deliver the offender to justice. Dead or alive, as the saying went back then.

Things are different today, yet such a reward from Deutsche Bahn for a vandal, or from the German state for a tax dodger, still exposes the same problem as it did back in the Wild West: It tries to enforce justice in a region where the sheriff or finance minister otherwise cannot. It is a stop-gap measure and therefore an indication of a deeper flaw.

Given Switzerland bucks and stonewalls as much as it can whenever the subject turns to the money in its banks, German authorities are left with the difficult task of pursuing tax dodgers.

Tough luck, one might say. But it’s not enough to say Switzerland regards itself as a democratic country just like Germany. That would fail to appreciate the fact that the country resists the widespread notion that paying taxes is an unavoidable civic duty. It must therefore be the German government’s goal to persuade Switzerland to co-operate – this is happening and already showing results.

To then buy incriminating information regardless, because the profit ratio is so attractive to the taxman (paying €2.5 million in bounty to get €100 million in taxes back), appears to be nothing more than a bounty. It also creates the appearance that a recent agreement on preventing tax evasion, reached with the help of the OECD, isn’t working.

But most important is the unsettling fact that the relevant evidence in this case was stolen and is supposed to be rewarded with a considerable sum of money.

Is the German government now going to establish a pension fund for Swiss bankers? When the bankers are fed up with managing the money of criminals they can simply sell their customers’ information to the relevant authorities. It would have been more ethical had these bankers openly refused to deal with illegal money in years past. But they failed to do this and they are now being rewarded to boot.

According to the philosopher Immanuel Kant, pragmatic acts have nothing to do with morality. Indeed they are the opposite. Every action should also function as a universal principle.

We would reward an honest person for finding and handing in a wallet. But a thief who remorsefully returns a wallet at best has his sentence reduced. The witness – if he is lucky – goes away as he came, no richer than he was before.

Certainly, the tax authorities should accept the data gratefully and use it if they get their hands on it. Yet even that is not completely above board. German law has no problem with such “fruits of the forbidden tree” as the justice system in the United States does. In that country, illegally obtained evidence cannot be used in court. Not so here.

At least the German government didn’t steal the information itself or obtained via torture or blackmail.

But that still doesn’t mean the tax authorities should make the bearer of this immoral package rich either.

This commentary was published with the kind permission of Zeit Online, where it originally appeared in German. Translation by The Local.

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CRIME

How politically motivated crimes are rising in Germany

Crimes with political motivations have risen in Germany according to police data, with cases of right-wing extremism making up the majority of crimes reported last year.

How politically motivated crimes are rising in Germany

Germany’s Criminal Police Office (BKA) registered 60,028 politically motivated crimes in 2023, the highest number recorded since records of this statistic began in 2001.

That’s almost two percent more politically motivated crimes than were recorded the previous year. But of those, 3,561 cases involved violence, which is approximately 12 percent less compared to 2022.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (SPD) presented the statistics this week. “We are seeing a new high in crimes directed against our open and free society,” she said according to Tagesschau. “We must show unequivocally that the rule of law does not accept this violence.”

Majority of political crimes classified as right-wing extremism 

With a total of 28,945 crimes, right-wing extremist-motivated cases made up the largest portion of political crimes in 2023 – up 23 percent from the year before.

There were 714 people recorded as being injured by right-wing extremist violence.

The President of the BKA, Holger Münch has previously emphasised that right-wing extremism remains the greatest threat to free democratic basic order in Germany.  

Although significantly less were recorded, left-wing extremist attacks also increased last year to 7,777 reported incidents.

Religiously motivated crimes increased by the biggest percent

Crimes registered as religiously motivated increased by the biggest proportion, up 203 percent from the previous year according to the BKA figures – to a total of 1,458.

The number of cases related to a foreign ideology also rose.

Anti-Semitic crimes also reached a new high last year with 5,164 offences being recorded (148 of these being acts of violence).

Conflict in the Middle East has certainly had an effect on domestic crime as well, with 4,369 crimes recorded as being connected. That figure is 70 times higher than the previous year, with more than half of them recorded after Hamas’ attack on October 7th. Of those, 1,927 were considered anti-Semitic by the BKA.

Public servants and asylum-seekers face increasing risk

The number of crimes against politicians and political volunteers also increased by 29 percent last year.

In recent weeks, a worrisome spike in both right- and left-wing attacks on politicians has been observed across Germany.

READ ALSO: Why are German politicians facing increasing attacks?

In her comments, Interior Minister Faeser warned that “a climate of violence” is being brought, especially by right-wing fringe groups.

Also motivated by right-wing ideologies were an increase in the number of attacks on asylum-seekers and refugees. Last year saw a significant increase in these attacks including 321 violent acts and 179 crimes against asylum accommodations registered.

Crimes targeting the “state” fell last year by 28 percent compared with 2022.

READ ALSO: Why experts say Germany’s rising crime rate is misleading

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