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Liability for Customs Offences




Administrative offence is understood as unlawful act committed by a guilty person, who is punishable according to the Administrative Offences Code of the Russian Federation.

The unique law concerning administrative offences in the customs sphere is the Administrative Offences Code of the Russian Federation. This normative legal act includes the basic principles of administrative legislation, variety of administrative penalties and directions, common procedure for carrying out administrative offences for all administrative authorities. It also contains measures to ensure guarantees, the procedure of carrying out the penalty decisions, the exhaustive list of offences and sanctions for the violation of normative orders established by the state. The administrative liability establishment and exception for the activity is possible with the help of amendments in the mentioned Code.

The juridical and physical persons are subject to administrative liability. From the point of view of measures liability definition physical persons are divided into officials and citizens. The majority of sanctions are provided for administrative offences committed by juridical person, and the least are committed by citizens.

The following penalties can be applied for commitment of administrative offences: 1) warning; 2) administrative fine; 3) seizure of instrument or item of administrative offence with compensation; 4) confiscation of instrument or item of administrative offence; 5) deprivation of special right belonging to physical person; 6) administrative arrest; 7) administrative expulsion of foreign citizens, persons without citizenship; 8) disqualification.

According to the Criminal Code of Russia the base of criminal liability forms is an act which contents all features of corpus delicti provided by criminal law. Customs crimes are enumerated in part VIII of the Criminal Code of Russia Crimes in economy sphere and deemed to be guilty dangerous acts to society which are attempted on social relations in business activity concerned with the movement of goods across the customs border. The subject of crime is a responsible person who reached by the time of crime perpetration the age of sixteen. The subjective part of crime is characterized by direct intention. A person realizes the danger of his activity and wishes of its fulfillment.

British Customs and Excise Management Act 1979 is An Act to consolidate the enactments relating to the collection and management of the revenues of customs and excise and in some cases to other matters in relation to which the Commissioners of Customs and Excise for the time being perform functions, with amendments to give effect to recommendations of the Law Commission and the Scottish Law Commission. This Act cover breaches of Community and UK customs law relating to the import, export and holding or processing of imported goods under customs supervision. This includes breaches by individual travellers as well as businesses. The duties and taxes covered by these provisions include customs duty, Community customs duty, import VAT and customs duties in the agricultural sector (the relevant tax and duty). It contains forfeiture of goods improperly imported, penalty for improper importation of goods, offences in relation to exportation of goods, offences in relation to exportation of prohibited or restricted goods, offences in relation to agricultural levies, offences in connection with carriage of goods coastwise, penalty for signalling to smugglers.

Exercise 4. Consult the text and find the English equivalents to the words combinations.

1. , , ; 2. ; 3. ; 4. ; 5. ; 6. ; 7. , ; 8. ; 9. ; 10. .

 

Exercise 5. Decide whether the following statements are true or false. Correct the false ones.

1.Disqualification relates to criminal penalty. 2. There is only one law concerning administrative offences in the customs sphere in Russia. 3. Only physical persons can be subject to administrative liability. 4. The subjective part of crime is characterized by an indirect aim. 5. Customs and Excise Management Act regulates import, export and holding or processing of imported goods.

 

Exercise 6. Answer the following questions.

1. What kinds of penalties can be applied for commitment of administrative offences? 2. In what document are the basic principles of administrative legislation mentioned? 3. Who can be subject of crime? 4. What is an administrative offence? 5. What are the main differences in the normative legal acts of the Russian Federation and the United Kingdom? 6. How many laws concerning administrative offences in the customs sphere are there in the Russian Federation? 7. How is it possible to change the administrative liability in the RF? 8. Who commits the majority of administrative offences? 9. What breaches does British Customs and Excise Management Act cover? 10. What are the duties and taxes in the UK?

 

Exercise 7. Give a short summary of the text.

Exercise 8. Now read and translate the text about different types of customs violations. Use the dictionary when necessary.

Smuggling

Smuggling is a clandestine transportation of goods or persons, such as out of a building, into a prison, or across an international border, in violation of applicable laws or other regulations. There are various motivations to smuggle. These include the participation in illegal trade, such as in the drug trade, in illegal immigration or illegal emigration, tax evasion, providing contraband to a prison inmate, or the theft of the items being smuggled. Examples of non-financial motivations include bringing banned items past a security checkpoint (such as airline security) or the removal of classified documents from a government or corporate office. Much smuggling occurs when enterprising merchants attempt to supply demand for a good or service that is illegal or heavily taxed. As a result, illegal drug trafficking, and the smuggling of weapons (illegal arms trade), as well as the historical staples of smuggling, alcohol and tobacco, are widespread. As the smuggler faces significant risk of civil and criminal penalties if caught with contraband, smugglers are able to impose a significant price premium on smuggled goods. The profits involved in smuggling goods appear to be extensive.

With regard to people smuggling, a distinction can be made between people smuggling as a service to those wanting to illegally migrate, and the involuntary trafficking of people. Trafficking in human beings, sometimes called human trafficking, or in the much referred to case of sexual services, sex trafficking is not the same as people smuggling. A smuggler will facilitate illegal entry into a country for a fee, but on arrival at their destination, the smuggled person is free; the trafficking victim is coerced in some way. Victims do not agree to be trafficked: they are tricked, lured by false promises, or forced into it. Traffickers use coercive tactics including deception, fraud, intimidation, isolation, physical threats and use of force, debt bondage or even force-feeding drugs to control their victims.

Tax Avoidance

Tax avoidance is the legal utilization of the tax regime to ones own advantage, to reduce the amount of tax that is payable by means that are within the law. The term tax mitigation is a synonym for tax avoidance. Its original use was by tax advisors as an alternative to the pejorative term tax avoidance. The term has also been used in the tax regulations of some jurisdictions to distinguish tax avoidance foreseen by the legislators from tax avoidance which exploits loopholes in the law.

Tax evasion is an activity commonly associated with the underground economy and one measure of the extent of tax evasion the amount of unreported income, namely the difference between the amount of income that should legally be reported to the tax authorities and the actual amount reported. Both tax avoidance and evasion can be viewed as forms of tax noncompliance, as they describe a range of activities that are unfavorable to a states tax system.

Tax avoidance may be considered to be the dodging of ones duties to society, or alternatively the right of every citizen to structure ones affairs in a manner allowed by law, to pay no more tax than what is required. Avoidance also reduces government revenue and brings the tax system into disrepute, so governments need to prevent tax avoidance or keep it within limits. The obvious way to do this is to frame tax rules so that there is no scope for avoidance. In practice this has not proved achievable and has led to an ongoing battle between governments amending legislation and tax advisors finding new scope for tax avoidance in the amended rules. In the UK in 2004, the Labour government announced that it would use retrospective legislation to counteract some tax avoidance schemes, and it has subsequently done so on a few occasions.

Exercise 9. Choose the right answer.

1. What examples of non-financial motivations do you know?

a) drug trade; b) bringing banned items;

c) illegal immigration; d) smuggling of weapons.

2. What is the synonym to the trafficking in human beings?

a) human trafficking; b) white slave;

c) contraband to a prison inmate; d) historical staples of smuggling.

3. What does the term tax avoidance mean?

a) amending legislation; b) research of new;

c) legal utilization of the tax regime; d) tax avoidance schemes.

4. What was Labour government going to use to counteract some tax avoidance schemes?

a) retrospective legislation; b) new amending;

c) loopholes in the law; d) good lawyers.

5. What is the tax avoidance associated with?

a) agriculture; b) shadow policy; c) culture; d) underground economy.

6. Why do people use legal tax avoidance?

a) to look better; b) to pay no more tax than required;

c) to begin new life in a new country; d) to get more opportunities.

7. Why do governments need to prevent tax avoidance or keep it within limits?

a) because tax avoidance creates loopholes in the law;

b) because tax avoidance increases the bribe value;

c) because tax avoidance reduces government revenue;

d) because tax avoidance damages the states image.

8. Whom must each citizen report his/her income?

a) to our employee; b) to our parents and relatives;

c) to the customs authorities; d) to the tax authorities.

9. What does a tax advisor do?

a) he helps legally to reduce payable taxes; b) he pays your taxes;

c) he hides your money in a safe; d) he reduces your income.

10. What kinds of items are more often smuggled?

a) children, women and other slaves;

b) nephews, uncles and other distant relatives;

c) clothes, footwear, headwear;

d) alcohol, tobacco, drugs, weapons, items of cultural value.

Exercise 10. Translate the following terms into Russian. Give your own definitions (in English) and learn these terms by heart.

1. tax avoidance; 2. tax evasion; 3. tax mitigation; 5. trafficker; 6. unreported income; 7. violation; 8. deception; 9. to smuggle; 10. intimidation.

Exercise 11. Write an outline of the text.

 

COMPREHENSION

Exercise 12. Fill in the table. Add two more categories for comparison.

  Russian Federation United Kingdom
Law regulating customs offences    
Administrative offences    
Possible punishment    

Exercise 13. Fill in the gaps using the words given below, and translate the sentences into Russian.

minimize taxation tax advisors legislation smuggling

taxpayers responsibility relating to motivation taxes

legal liability immigrants

1. Customs officers arrested the band that has been opium in the UK for eight years. 2. There are not any in the Russia Federation, and any tax avoidance is considered as a violation of a law. 3. To pay is a civil duty. 4. Individuals usually require tax advisors to . 5. Tenants have for any damage they cause. 6. Before an item of becomes law it may be known as a bill. 7. Illegal are smuggled into the country by boat. 8. Documents immigration laws were discussed during last Parliament session. 9. What was your for becoming a Customs Officer? 10. It is the to ensure that returns made to the tax authorities are correct and complete.

 

Exercise 14. Replace the underlined words with the synonymous terms from the texts.

1. She has not committed a criminal offence. 2. You will bear responsibility if you commit an unlawful act. 3. Smuggling is a disciplinable offence. 4. We have been able to diminish our tax bill by 10%. 5. When he was doing this he didnt think about his own benefit. 6. It is out of my competence. 7. When was this Statutory Instrument abrogated? 8. The state used to requisite land from those who opposed to the king. 9. One of the most prevalent customs crimes is smuggling. 10. You should be careful as you venture to lose everything youve got.

Exercise 15. a)Match the verbs on the left with the nouns on the right.

1. to facilitate a) a crime;
2. to face b) the amount of tax;
3. to be established ) procedures;
4. to commit d) a victim;
5. to carry out e) illegal entry into a country;
6. to lure f) into disrepute;
7. to reduce g) significant risk;
8. to bring h) to an battle;
9. to coerce i) by the state;
10. to lead j) by false promises.

b)In the sentences below replace the Russian expressions with the phrases you have got. Use these expressions in the necessary form.

1. The modern customs policy of some countries ( ). 2. All the people if they want to receive vast sums of money ( ). 3. Customs tariffs on the exported goods ( ) in accordance with the working legislation, as well as with the foreign and domestic policy of the country. 4. He was sent to prison because he ( ). 5. You couldnt leave the country until you ( ) customs (). 6. He ( ) into this business. 7. There are several ways ( ), both legal and unlawful. 8. The high crime rate ( ) this district ( ). 9. The criminals ( ). 10. The unreasonable policy of the President ( ) between three branches of Government.

WRITING AND COMMUNICATION

Exercise 16. Write an assay on the given topics and discuss it with your partner.

1. Comprehensive analysis of Russian and British legislation regulating customs relations.

2. The main types of customs offences.

Exercise 17. Translate the following sentences from Russian into English.

1. 1 . 2. . 3. , . 4. . 5. - , . 6. , . 7. , , . 8. , - , . 9. ? 10. , , .

 

PROJECT WORK

Prepare to discuss the topic The dynamics in the customs crime. First group presents the statistics data, graphs and official resources related to the Russia Federation and second to the United Kingdom. Try to explain currency changes.


Contents

Introduction. 3

Unit 1. STRUCTURE OF CUSTOMS ORGANIZATION.. 4

Unit 2. CUSTOMS CONTROL.. 12

Unit 3. CONTRACT.. 20

Unit 4. CUSTOMS REGIMES. 28

Unit 5. PROHIBITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS. 36

Unit 6. CORRESPONDENCE.. 44

Unit 7. Tax and Duties. 52

Unit 8. Customs Procedures. 60

Unit 9. Electronic declaring.. 68

Unit 10. Customs Offences. 76

 

 


 





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