Originally posted by primamateria
If anyone has any information about this, links or even possible contacts or ideas on where to get some insider info please post here as I wouldn't
mind having a shot at writing this story.
Here is one from this morning....
Talk about putting your money where your mouth is
www.abc.net.au...
Dick Smith threatens ATO with tax downgrade
Posted Sat Jun 21, 2008 10:00am AEST
Famed philanthropist Dick Smith has written to the tax commissioner threatening to minimise his tax.
The letter was in response to a notice from the Australian Tax Office which said his taxes were likely to come under greater scrutiny.
Mr Smith says he made the threat because he is angry the Federal Government lost billions of dollars in taxpayer funds when the Super SeaSprite
helicopter project fell over.
"I'm basically stirring them up down there and saying if you're going to lose a billion dollars of our money, which could have paid for a brand new
Royal North Shore Hospital, tell us what errors were made so they're not going to be made again," he said.
And this
www.news.com.au...
Dick Smith says he'll 'do a Kerry' on tax
Article from: The Australian
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By Dennis Shanahan
June 21, 2008 01:58am
* Tax office tells Dick Smith he'll be scrutinised
* Famous philanthropist is furious
* He threatens to become a legal tax minimiser
DICK Smith, who every year gives $1 million to charity and pays more than $1 million in tax, has threatened to "do a Kerry Packer" and become a
massive tax minimiser.
The famed philanthropist, aerial adventurer and face of a thousand Dick Smith brands has told the Australian Tax Office he is considering becoming the
"greatest legal tax minimiser in the history of Australia".
An angry Mr Smith has protested directly in a letter to tax commissioner Michael D'Ascenzo about a billion-dollar bureaucratic bungle, after
receiving advice from the tax office that he would be subjected to closer scrutiny, The Australian reports.
Mr D'Ascenzo sent a letter and brochure to Mr Smith, as someone who "effectively controls $30 million or more in net wealth", about the ATO
building "an open and co-operative working relationship" with him and his tax advisers.
The letter said that "given your position of influence in the community, it is important that you don't take unacceptable risks when it comes to
tax". It also warned that, as part of a long-term crackdown on wealthy Australians, "our scrutiny of your tax affairs and the assistance we can
provide may greatly increase".
The commissioner's letter, headed "Wealthy and wise - A tax guide for Australia's wealthiest people", and the brochure called "Wealthy
Australians and tax compliance", prompted the threat from Mr Smith to change his attitude to paying tax.
"In the past, I have been proud to pay a lot of tax - even if more than that required by law - because I have received great satisfaction from
knowing that I'm paying for some of the great things we have in Australia," Mr Smith said in a letter to Mr D'Ascenzo. "That view has now
changed."
Mr Smith cited the words in 1991 of the late Packer, once Australia's richest man, that "if anybody in this country doesn't minimise their tax,
they want their heads read".
Read more on this story at The Australian
Here is that story......
www.theaustralian.news.com.au...
I'll do a Kerry Packer on tax: Dick Smith
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Dennis Shanahan, Political editor | June 21, 2008
DICK Smith, who every year gives $1 million to charity and pays more than $1 million in tax, has threatened to "do a Kerry Packer" and become a
massive tax minimiser.
The famed philanthropist, aerial adventurer and face of a thousand Dick Smith brands has told the Australian Tax Office he is considering becoming the
"greatest legal tax minimiser in the history of Australia".
An angry Mr Smith has protested directly in a letter to tax commissioner Michael D'Ascenzo about a billion-dollar bureaucratic bungle, after
receiving advice from the tax office that he would be subjected to closer scrutiny.
Mr D'Ascenzo sent a letter and brochure to Mr Smith, as someone who "effectively controls $30 million or more in net wealth", about the ATO
building "an open and co-operative working relationship" with him and his tax advisers. The letter said that "given your position of influence in
the community, it is important that you don't take unacceptable risks when it comes to tax". It also warned that, as part of a long-term crackdown
on wealthy Australians, "our scrutiny of your tax affairs and the assistance we can provide may greatly increase".
The commissioner's letter, headed "Wealthy and wise - A tax guide for Australia's wealthiest people", and the brochure called "Wealthy
Australians and tax compliance", prompted the threat from Mr Smith to change his attitude to paying tax.
"In the past, I have been proud to pay a lot of tax - even if more than that required by law - because I have received great satisfaction from
knowing that I'm paying for some of the great things we have in Australia," Mr Smith said in a letter to Mr D'Ascenzo. "That view has now
changed."
Mr Smith cited the words in 1991 of the late Packer, once Australia's richest man, that "if anybody in this country doesn't minimise their tax,
they want their heads read".
Mr Packer, who was accused of paying no personal tax, said the Government wasn't "spending it so well that we should be donating extra".
Mr Smith said in his letter: "I didn't agree with this statement at the time, but I certainly do now."
Mr Smith yesterday told The Weekend Australian he and his wife had donated $1 million a year to charity and "I still pay more than $1 million a year
in tax".
"I'm not in the rich list, but I am well off and have never complained about paying tax," he said.
The Sydney businessman said he changed his attitude because $1 billion of taxpayers' money was lost in the failed Super Seasprite helicopters
project.
"Michael, do you understand that $1 billion could have given us a completely new Royal North Shore Hospital (in Sydney)?" Mr Smith asked the
commissioner in his letter.
"I
[edit on 22/6/2008 by mungodave]