The article features an interview with Terence Ball, a British businessman who has built a reputation for exploiting loopholes in tax laws to avoid paying taxes. The article reveals Ball's connections to organized crime and his role as an enabler of tax evasion.
Ball admits to having provided sanctuary to Camorra gangsters in Lancashire and claims that he was not formally involved with the mafia, but they did each other favors. He also recounts a story about hiding Gennaro Panzuto, a former mafia member, from authorities.
The article highlights Ball's latest venture: a snail farm-based business rates avoidance plan. The operation involves claiming exemptions for a "charity shop" that sells cheap goods, with Ball using his connections to secure the necessary permits and approvals.
Lawmakers have taken action against Ball, including one of his companies being wound up in court for unpaid taxes. Westminster council has also launched an investigation into another operation at his Winchester House office building.
Ball has been accused of exploiting loopholes and taking advantage of weak enforcement of financial regulations. The BBC had previously investigated Panzuto's links to the UK business world, but no further action was taken due to lack of information from authorities.
The article suggests that Ball's tax avoidance scheme may be part of a larger problem in which unscrupulous traders drop on one avoidance scheme after another.
Ball admits to having provided sanctuary to Camorra gangsters in Lancashire and claims that he was not formally involved with the mafia, but they did each other favors. He also recounts a story about hiding Gennaro Panzuto, a former mafia member, from authorities.
The article highlights Ball's latest venture: a snail farm-based business rates avoidance plan. The operation involves claiming exemptions for a "charity shop" that sells cheap goods, with Ball using his connections to secure the necessary permits and approvals.
Lawmakers have taken action against Ball, including one of his companies being wound up in court for unpaid taxes. Westminster council has also launched an investigation into another operation at his Winchester House office building.
Ball has been accused of exploiting loopholes and taking advantage of weak enforcement of financial regulations. The BBC had previously investigated Panzuto's links to the UK business world, but no further action was taken due to lack of information from authorities.
The article suggests that Ball's tax avoidance scheme may be part of a larger problem in which unscrupulous traders drop on one avoidance scheme after another.