Mossack is a Panama-based law firm whose services include
incorporating companies in offshore jurisdictions such as the British Virgin
Islands. It administers offshore firms for a yearly fee. Other services include
wealth management.
The OECD Supplementary Report on Panama reported:
“The 2014 Supplementary Report concluded that six of the ten
essential elements were in place. Two of the essential elements were determined
to be “not in place”. These were the availability of ownership and identity
information (Element A.1); and the availability of accounting records (Element
A.2).”
“One essential element related to Panama’s network of
information exchange mechanisms with all relevant partners (Element C.2) was
determined to be “in place but certain aspects of the legal implementation of
the element needed improvement”.
“Another essential element concerning Panama’s ability to
provide information in a timely manner (Element C.5) involves practical issues
that will be assessed at a later stage.”
And it notes that:
“Panama has enacted new legislation to strengthen its
anti-money laundering (AML) framework. Under the new AML legislation, resident
agents are required to hold detailed records of their clients, including those
of final beneficiaries. These measures help to ensure the availability of
identity and ownership information on companies and private foundations.
However, it appears that resident agents are not required to hold information
on all shareholders and beneficiaries, but just on the natural persons that
have the final control on the legal entities for whom they are acting as
resident agents.”
“With respect to companies, a regulation to the new AML
legislation clarified that resident agents are required to identify and verify
the identity of final beneficiaries holding 25% or more of the shares of the
legal entity. In any event, the new obligation imposed by the amended
Commercial Code on all legal entities to keep updated share registers for
nominal shares, subject to penalties for non-compliance, is sufficient to
ensure the availability of ownership information with respect to shareholders
where nominal shares are concerned”
But there are problems where trusts and foundations are
concerned:
“Accounting requirements are not in place in Panama for
entities other than companies and partnerships that carry on business in
Panama. In addition, the Panamanian law does not specify the type of records
and minimum retention period related to accounting documents pertaining to
trusts and foundations”
It also noted that the Trust Law and Foundations Law were
silent on the type of records required to be kept and their retention period,
and recommended that these requirements be clarified to ensure that reliable
accounting records are maintained for a five year period. This has been
improved since but the report did note that:
“Foundation incorporation documents that do not contain the
founder’s identity information cannot be notarised, and this is an essential
requirement in order for the foundation to formally and legally exist. However,
identity information about the beneficiaries is not included in the Public
Registry.”
With regard to companies, there are two forms of companies
in Panama: Sociedades Anónimas
(SAs or corporations) and Sociedades de Responsabilidad
Limitada (SRLs).
Both SAs and SRLs are required to have a resident agent. The
names and addresses of the owners of an SRL must be published in the Public
Registry But SAs are the most commonly used anamanian companies by both resident
and foreign investor
SAs are created by public deed which must be registered in
the Public Registry. They must have a resident agent at all times who must be a
lawyer admitted to practice in Panama
Panama has anti-money laundering legislation, and this has
been tightened since the OECD made their initial review. These require look
through on legal persons. A natural person is a human being, but holdings can
be held by a trust, foundation or another company. The law states that: “in the
event that the final beneficiary is a legal person, due diligence will prolong
until getting to know the natural person that is the owner or controller.”
But what is not clear is how close the Panamanian regulator
monitors how well this is done. In Jersey, the Financial Services Commission
can seem very heavy handed, but by contrast, the Panamanian authority seems
more lax.
The JFSC conducts continual and detailed reviews of compliance with the law, going into firms, examining records in detail, and making recommendations for any weakness in process or data, and will continue to ensure it is satisfied that any rectification of weakness in a regulated company are fixed. There are large sanction lists of individuals which must be checked against final beneficial owners, and any trading with these would lead to prosecution. It is not clear that the Panamanian regulator does this.
The JFSC conducts continual and detailed reviews of compliance with the law, going into firms, examining records in detail, and making recommendations for any weakness in process or data, and will continue to ensure it is satisfied that any rectification of weakness in a regulated company are fixed. There are large sanction lists of individuals which must be checked against final beneficial owners, and any trading with these would lead to prosecution. It is not clear that the Panamanian regulator does this.
The leaked records comprise more than 11 million documents -
emails, bank accounts and client records – which represent the inner workings
of Mossack Fonseca for nearly forty years, from 1977 to December 2015 . They reveal
the offshore holdings of individuals and companies from more than 200 countries
and territories. And they suggest that the Panamanian oversight is not robust
enough in its monitoring and investigation of companies like Mossack,.
As the Irish Times reported:
“They recount example after example of ethical and legal
wrongdoing by some clients and provide evidence of a firm happy to act as a
gatekeeper to the secrets of its clients, even those who turn out to be crooks,
members of the Mafia, drug dealers, corrupt politicians and tax evaders.”
And it is interesting to note how increased regulation led
to changes in the inner workings of the company Back in 1987, Mossack Fonseca made its first big move to
establish a branch in the British Virgin Islands, which a few years before had
passed a law that made it easy to set up offshore companies without public
disclosure of owners and directors. Bearer shares in BVI companies were also a good way of keeping anonymity and have featured heavily in the reports.
When shares are bought and sold, a registered shareholder name is included on share certificate details. Bearer shares bypass this by not including the name of the holder on a physical share certificate. Incidentally, the issue of bearer shares is not permitted in Jersey companies.
But when the British Virgin Islands cracked down on bearer shares in 2005 , as the Irish Times notes, Mossack Fonseca moved that particular business to Panama. In other words, as centres of operations like BVI became better regulated, and required more compliance, Mossack seems to have shifted to jurisdictions that were less fussy.
When shares are bought and sold, a registered shareholder name is included on share certificate details. Bearer shares bypass this by not including the name of the holder on a physical share certificate. Incidentally, the issue of bearer shares is not permitted in Jersey companies.
But when the British Virgin Islands cracked down on bearer shares in 2005 , as the Irish Times notes, Mossack Fonseca moved that particular business to Panama. In other words, as centres of operations like BVI became better regulated, and required more compliance, Mossack seems to have shifted to jurisdictions that were less fussy.
As the Guardian reports, “over a decade, more than 600 official law
enforcement requests from the BVI Financial Investigation Agency (FIA) shows
that in multiple cases Mossack Fonseca had no idea for whom it was acting. Performance
improved in 2015. A name was given in response to all but one of about 90
request”
The Guardian sees the BVI as been licensing the firm even
though it knew it was not fulfilling its legal obligations, but it could be
seen from the increased compliance with requests that the BVI was strengthening
its control.
There are different narratives here, the Irish Times taking the view that a more robust compliance regime lead to Mossack leaving BVI, the Guardian seeing BVI as still being involved, despite itself reporting the rather contradictory fact that performance with requests had improved.
What we don’t know, which is standard in cases like this, is what kind of rectification programme was put in place to correct past deficiencies, and what timetable was set out to do so. Until that information is forthcoming, it is difficult to know how good the BVI regulation has been.
There are different narratives here, the Irish Times taking the view that a more robust compliance regime lead to Mossack leaving BVI, the Guardian seeing BVI as still being involved, despite itself reporting the rather contradictory fact that performance with requests had improved.
What we don’t know, which is standard in cases like this, is what kind of rectification programme was put in place to correct past deficiencies, and what timetable was set out to do so. Until that information is forthcoming, it is difficult to know how good the BVI regulation has been.
But there are loopholes in legislation. Mossack Fonseca
often appears not to have stored information on beneficial owners. Instead it used
a loophole in the legislation that allows company agents to rely on an
“introducer” to carry out due diligence.
Yet it must have been having some impact, because if all
jurisdictions were regulated alike, Mossack would not have started moving
business away from BVI as the pressure on requests became more insistent. The
Irish Times notes that Mossack began moving from BVI to Panama and Anguilla and
Samoa as a result of increasingly stringent BVI regulation.
The Sydney Morning Herald reports this “As you are aware, we
have been deliberately stalling the proposals from OECD countries to enter into
Tax Information Exchange Agreements (TIEA)," the chief executive of the
Samoa International Finance Authority, Erna Vaai, wrote to the Panama firm in
June 2007.
And it noted that “While Samoa eventually signed the TIEA
with Australia in 2009, in practice Australian information requests to Samoa
can take more than three years to process.”
Of course we saw something similar with the French
blacklisting of Jersey for delays over TIEAs which was only rectified when
legislation was amended to ensure that there would not be extensive delays in
the process.
The Irish Times also notes that the fall-out could be extensive:
“Although many of the operations could be deemed legal,
which has been admitted by the ICIJ itself, the potential tax-evasion dealings
are bound to have serious political ramifications across continents.”
1 comment:
This, from the website of Panama Offshore Worldwide, says it all:
Other clients that are more educated on the subject usually know that Panama banking takes it a step further. In Panama, it is a criminal offense for any bank employee to divulge any information about a client without a court order, and those court orders are only written up if the person is suspected of financing terrorism, drug trafficking, money laundering or other serious crimes. Panama's banks will not accept deposits from government officials unless they can prove that the source of the funds are from legal activities.
Some clients tend to think that opening a personal bank account in Panama and depositing the funds would be enough to keep their assets secure and private. However, all these bank secrecy laws don't change the fact that a personal account would be in your name, and therefore would be traced back to you in various ways.
For Panama bank secrecy to truly be used effectively, a corporation with nominee directors is essential. We provide nominee directors for the corporation, so your name is not actually registered in the government's documents and therefore cannot be traced back to you.
So: you want to launder money. You set up a corporation with nominee directors who look the other way, as Mossack Fonseca appear to have done. Because the money is in their name rather than yours, the Panamanian government says there is no case against the nominee directors, and refuses to allow information to be divulged. You get away scot free.
Doesn't take much doing...
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