SCHEDULES

SCHEDULE 6 AGGREGATES LEVY: EVASION, MISDECLARATION AND NEGLECT

Part 1 CRIMINAL OFFENCES

3Conduct involving evasions or misstatements

1

A person is guilty of an offence under this paragraph if his conduct during any particular period must have involved the commission by him of one or more offences under the preceding provisions of this Schedule.

2

For the purposes of any proceedings for an offence under this paragraph it shall be immaterial whether the particulars of the offence or offences that must have been committed are known.

3

A person guilty of an offence under this paragraph shall be liable (subject to sub-paragraph (4) below)—

a

on summary conviction, to a penalty of the statutory maximum or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or to both;

b

on conviction on indictment, to a penalty of any amount or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years, or to both.

4

In the case of any offence under this paragraph, where the statutory maximum is less than three times the sum of the amounts of aggregates levy which are shown to be amounts that were or were intended to be evaded by the conduct in question, the penalty on summary conviction shall be the amount equal to three times that sum (instead of the statutory maximum).

5

For the purposes of sub-paragraph (4) above the amounts of levy that were or were intended to be evaded by any conduct shall be taken to include—

a

the amount of any tax credit, and

b

the amount of any repayment of aggregates levy,

which was, or was intended to be, obtained in circumstances where there was no entitlement to it.

6

In determining for the purposes of sub-paragraph (4) above how much aggregates levy (in addition to any amount falling within sub-paragraph (5) above) was or was intended to be evaded, no account shall be taken of the extent (if any) to which any liability to aggregates levy of any person fell, or would have fallen, to be reduced by the amount of any tax credit or repayments of aggregates levy to which he was, or would have been, entitled.