Sept. 28 (Bloomberg) -- A Wisconsin neurosurgeon was re-
indicted by a U.S. grand jury on new charges that he failed to declare an HSBC
Holdings Plc account in India valued in 2009 at $8.7 million.
If convicted, Ahuja, who lives in Greendale, Wisconsin, faces as long as 10 years in prison on the FBAR charges, five years on conspiracy and three years on charges of filing false tax returns.
Arvind Ahuja was indicted again by a federal grand jury in
Milwaukee, where he was initially charged June 28 with concealing accounts from
the Internal Revenue Service. The nine- count indictment added a charge that
Ahuja conspired with two HSBC India bankers to defraud the IRS from 2006 to
2009.
The charges against Ahuja come amid a widening U.S. crackdown on
offshore tax evasion that includes grand jury investigations of eight foreign
banks. Prosecutors have filed criminal tax charges against more than three dozen
former U.S. clients of UBS AG and Credit Suisse Group AG, Switzerland’s two
biggest banks, and London-based HSBC, Europe’s biggest bank.
Ahuja took steps to hide his offshore accounts, according to the
indictment made public today. In 2007, an HSBC India banker told a colleague
that Ahuja “has requested that he does not want any kind of mail at his US or
India address,” according to the indictment. “He wants a HOLD on all his
accounts.”
Prosecutors said Ahuja failed to report more than $1.2 million
in interest income, pay taxes due or file Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial
Accounts, or FBARs.
In New Jersey a businessman Vaibhav Dahake pleaded guilty in April to
conspiring with five HBSC bankers to hide his Indian accounts from the IRS. His
plea came four days after a U.S. judge in California gave permission to the IRS
to serve a so- called John Doe summons on HSBC for information about Americans
who may have banked in India to hide accounts from U.S. tax authorities.
In both the Dahake and Ahuja cases, prosecutors said HSBC ran a
U.S. division called NRI Services that marketed offshore banking services to
U.S. citizens of Indian descent. Through NRI, HSBC India “encouraged U.S.
citizens to open undeclared bank accounts in India,” according to the Ahuja
indictment.
If convicted, Ahuja, who lives in Greendale, Wisconsin, faces as long as 10 years in prison on the FBAR charges, five years on conspiracy and three years on charges of filing false tax returns.
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