If they take Gladstone's job then he should publicly ask the top foreign goverments to take away the visa's of the top officials of TADD, Minstry of Finance and the Ministry of the Public Service.
Gladstone needs Danny Walker or Chris Christie as Commissioner of Taxes or whatever is the Title of Head of TADD.
Tax saga deepensPublished: Saturday | June 11, 2011
Audley Shaw
Erica Virtue, Senior Gleaner Writer FINANCE MINISTER Audley Shaw has distanced the Ministry of Finance and himself from alleged attempts to remove Gladstone Turner from his job.
Turner is the team leader of the Special Enforcement team from the Tax Administration and Assessment Department (TAAD), the unit that hunts tax cheats in Jamaica.
Word reaching this newspaper is that officials from the finance ministry and officials from the TAAD believe the Government and the finance ministry have been embarrassed by Turner's comments in a television interview on Thursday night following an aborted tax- compliancce operation.
Credible sources from the department have told The Gleaner that attempts are being made to remove the outspoken public servant from the unit and from his job.
Shaw, responding to questions on the matter from The Gleaner yesterday, distanced himself from any attempts to dismiss the public servant.
"I do not interfere with either the Tax Compliance Programme or staffing in any of the departments under my portfolio. Please direct your queries to the financial secretary, or the commissioner general, Tax Administration, Jamaica," Shaw responded.
Viralee Lattibeaudiere, who heads the department, and public relations officer Merris Haughton could not be located or contacted by telephone since the operation was made public.
Turner led an enforcement team to Auto Traders 2000 Limited, a business place operated by Ricky Vaz, brother of information minister Daryl Vaz, to collect outstanding taxes dating back to 1994.
The issue spanned three TAAD tiers of discussions, according to Turner.
preferential treatment
Speaking on CVM Television on Thursday night, he said the issue was fraught with "curry favour and brown stew", Jamaican terms indicating preferential treatment, as the team was stopped in its tracks when instructions were given by senior executives at the TAAD for the operation to be halted.
Turner said it was not true that money was paid to the officials on the day of the raid.
At Wednesday's post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House, Vaz went down the wicket on the subject, insisting that the officials collected $4 million on the spot. The public servant rubbished Vaz's claims, saying instead that the following day when he went to office, a cheque for $4 million was paid, and later, $1 million was paid.
He said the $5 million demanded by the department was only a fraction of what was owed, and indebtedness dated back 17 years
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