Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Belastingdienst Amsterdam
Belastingdienst Amsterdam - Credit: BIC / Wikimedia Commons - License: CC-BY-SA
Business
Crime
ethnic profiling
fraud
Tax Authority
childcare allowance
income tax
Renske Leijten
SP
Tuesday, 7 July 2020 - 09:37

Share this article:

Tax authority's dodgy fraud accusations also extended to income tax declarations: report

The Tax Authority's tendency to label people as fraudsters based on profiling and suspicions also extended to income tax declarations, RTL Nieuws and Trouw report based on confidential documents, released documents, and discussions with people involved. According to the news agencies, tens of thousands of people were labeled fraudsters, had to prove their innocence themselves, and sometimes struggled with the tax authorities for years afterwards.

It was already known that the Tax Authority wrongly labeled a large number of parents as fraudsters and halted their childcare allowance as a result. And that a second nationality was one of the criteria the Tax Authority used to subject people to stricter checks. According to RTL and Trouw, these practices also extended to income tax declarations, under the code name 'project 1043' launched in 2012. The starting point of this project was to "annoyingly track potential abusers," the news agencies wrote

Fraud investigations were launched against citizens because they had a tax advisor the Tax Authority considered a "facilitator" to fraud, for example. Certain deductions could also trigger an investigation, including high healthcare costs, gifts, or spending on pension. The suspected citizens often had to pay substantial amounts in extra tax charges, because previously approved deductibles were rejected. And afterwards they lived with extra checks and under stricter supervision for years, because they had been labeled fraudsters, according to RTL and Trouw.

SP parliamentarian Renske Leijten, who has been a driving force behind the investigation into the Tax Authority's abuses in the childcare allowance affair, called this new revelation "unfortunately no surprise". "What is painful is that this has persisted after the allowance affair. You expect some self-correcting ability, but time and time again the media reveal that things go wrong," she said to RTL.

More like this

Image
A crowded Leidsestraat in Amsterdam
Over 80 new laws and rules changes will take effect in the Netherlands on Jan. 1
Image
During a committee meeting in parliament, Renske Leijten lashes out at State Secretary Aukje de Vries over the current Cabinet’s slow progress in resolving the childcare benefits scandal. 29 June 2023
SP member Leijten who exposed childcare benefits scandal leaves the Tweede Kamer after 17 years
Image
The Belastingdienst logo on a window
Tax Authority uncovers potential organized fraud network involving at least €6.7 million
Image
Belastingdienst tax blue envelope
Man who received business as a gift does not have to pay €4 mil. income tax on it: Court
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Report highlights shortcomings in care before killing of 11-year-old Sohani
  • Police criticised over delayed response to attack on Rotterdam mosque
  • Netherlands joins call to curb Russian tourist travel to Europe
  • Oranje departs for United States as FIFA World Cup countdown begins
  • Men drugging, raping wives & girlfriends on camera is "next level" criminality: Police

Top stories

  • Video: Suspected tornado whips through village near Enschede, damaging homes
  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India
  • Rate of birth complications higher in poorer neighborhoods
  • At least 8 Dutch men suspected of drugging, raping, filming their wives, girlfriends
  • Court rules Ye can remain in Netherlands for Arnhem performances this week

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content