ottawa doctor, ottawa tutoring,   ottawa plumbing, , trafficspamme, games , ottaw , movee, soong , news, Laptop Computer,Helpdesk Software,Borrow Money,Yellow Page Advertising,cheapest loans,Email Hosting,Make Money,العاب 2011 , افلام 20, صور2011و حمل , تحميل, احمل و اريد تحميل , ابحث عنو هل يوجد ,تحميل من ,داونلودو اعلى سرعة, سنواتو2011 ,2012 , 2010 , زيادة , جوجل ادسندس ,
    
    
    
    
 
     
 Before I continue let me make it clear that the above is not
 an accusation but a genuine question, and one which I think needs to be
 answered urgently.
By now there can be few people who have not heard that Sir 
Paul Stephenson, the Commissioner of London’s Metropolitan Police force,
 resigned last night. In his resignation statement Sir Paul said that it
 was just co-incidence that the man he employed as his £1,000 a day PR 
advisor (“spin doctor”) was also PR advisor to Champneys, the luxury 
chain of health spa’s where Sir Paul and Lady Stephenson enjoyed a free 
five week stay whilst Sir Paul was recovering from major surgery.
Everyone seems to be concentrating on the fact that the said spin 
doctor (why did Sir Paul even need one?) was one Neil Wallis, former 
Deputy Editor of the 
News of the World under Andy Coulson. 
Wallis was arrested by the Police on Friday as part of the new enquiry 
into the illegal practices, including phone hacking and blagging, which 
now appear to have been endemic at the 
News of the World, and 
possibly elsewhere.
But there are other questions which so far seem to have been 
overlooked.
In his resignation statement Sir Paul insisted there had been “no 
impropriety” about his stay while he recovered from having a benign 
tumour removed from his leg. I understand that he did record the matter 
in the Metropolitan Police’s Gift and Hospitality Register. But is that 
enough? Did he pay tax on the “gift”, indeed should he have paid tax on 
the £12,000 it is reported was the value of the stay (part of the costs,
 we are told, was paid for by the Metropolitan Police medical insurance)
 – did he even consider that he might need to do so?
Of course a lot will depend on how this gift was accounted for by 
Champneys. Unless the £12,000 was paid to Champneys by Stephen Purdew “a
 personal friend of Sir Paul” then the gift will have come from the 
company which owns Champneys. Now Stephen Purdew is referred to as “the 
owner of Champneys” but there are other shareholders who may not take 
kindly to their Managing Director, the said Stephen Purdew, giving away 
their money to the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
Even if Mr Purdew was the 100% owner of Champneys the fact is that 
the company and its assets, including cash in the bank, are not his to 
give away at will. This is something that most accountants with clients 
who own all or most of a company spend time trying to explain. You might
 own the company but you don’t own its assets. For example, you cannot 
treat the company bank account as if it were your own. Neither can you 
use or allow others to use company property or services without proper 
approval by the board or, in some cases shareholders, and without 
accounting for this in your accounts and tax returns.
It was his failure to follow these rules which resulted in Conrad 
Black being sent to jail. He was accused of using company assets for his
 own personal use.
So unless Stephen Purdew paid the £12,000 to Champneys out of his own
 taxed income he will need to have accounted for the “gift” somewhere in
 the company accounts. Such a gift would not be allowed as a proper 
business expense and so in effect it would be taxable both for 
Corporation Tax and Value Added Tax (between them adding something like 
another £5,000 cost to Champneys).
Mind you this pales to insignificance when you consider the past 
history of Champneys. What is true is that Purdew and his mother 
control, but don’t totally own, a complex and opaque group of companies 
most of which appear to be loss making. A few years ago there was a 
major row when Purdew told the holders of preference shares that there 
was no money to pay them a dividend. Many of these shareholders were 
well known celebrities who probably could afford to forego dividends but
 it begs the question of how, when Champneys claims to be loss making, 
Purdew appears on the 
Sunday Times Rich List and Champneys have
 a multi million pound balance sheet. Presumably somewhere in the group 
there is a profit being made but perhaps not in the subsidiaries which 
have external shareholders.
If Purdew hasn’t accounted for this “gift” correctly then there could
 be charges of tax avoidance and money laundering. Even if Sir Paul 
Stephenson doesn’t know where the money came from he should be aware 
that the requirements of UK anti-money laundering legislation – not to 
mention the Bribery Act which came into effect on the first of this 
month and which has long been heralded – make it clear that he should 
make himself aware of such matters.
It isn’t enough to just list the gift in the relevant register and 
think that’s the end of it. Actually Sir Paul seems to have forgotten 
that the whole purpose of having these registers is to ensure that 
proper investigation into gifts and expense claims can be carried out 
and that the public can take a view as to whether they approve. Listing a
 gift – even if it “within the rules” – doesn’t mean that it is approved
 of. This was the point that seems to have eluded Members of Parliament 
who bleated “we didn’t break any rules” when their expense claims were 
published. If senior officers at the Metropolitan Police don’t see that 
then it isn’t surprising the investigation into MPs expenses resulted in
 very few – mainly those who forged receipts – being charged.
Even if everything was done correctly, approval sought and tax 
accounted for, there remains the question of whether it was acceptable 
or not for the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police to accept such a 
gift no matter who it came from. The fact that he and his employers 
thought there was “no impropriety” in him accepting it does not mean 
that the public would agree. Sir Paul is not poorly paid and the 
Metropolitan Police insurance, whilst not running to Champneys, would 
have provided him with more than acceptable rehabilitation.
I have always found it strange that people who hold positions like 
Sir Paul, as well as MPs and the like, seem to think that there is one 
law for them and one for the rest of us.
For example, until recently MPs were allowed to charge expenses 
without producing receipts. Try doing that on your own expense claim and
 see how far it gets you. OK, there are a few things you can claim 
without receipts, such as parking meter costs but you aren’t going to 
make a bundle on that even if you claim to have parked in central London
 all day. But the fact is that “no receipt – no payment” is the 
situation unless you are one of the “ruling class” to whom normal rules 
seem not to apply.
This 
laissez faire attitude doesn’t permeate the whole of 
government or the civil service. When I was a local authority councillor
 a few years ago I had to account for every penny I claimed in expenses.
 I once made a claim for travel to a meeting which was 2 miles longer 
than the “approved route”. This was picked up and I pointed out that 
there was a diversion because of road works and my claim was paid 
including the extra 80 pence for the diversion. I wonder what it cost in
 time, phone calls and salary, for the council bean counter to query my 
claim.
One nice summer evening a friend and I drove out to a country pub. As
 I walked into the bar I spotted two mid-ranking council officers. I 
said hello and whilst ordering my drinks asked them if they wanted 
something – as you do. They said that council policy said they couldn’t 
accept gifts, even including a friendly pint, as doing so could be 
construed as a bribe. Ah well, saved me the price of a couple of pints.
The reason for the council policy was simply to ensure than 
even if there was no impropriety there could be no impression or 
question of impropriety. That is the point that Sir Paul Stephenson and 
others like him seem to have ignored.