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Can A Person Be Extradited For Tax Offences?

Answer By law4u team

Tax offences—such as tax evasion, falsification of financial records, or fraudulent accounting—are increasingly being treated as serious crimes in international law, especially when they involve large sums, cross-border transactions, or links to money laundering. Whether a person can be extradited for tax offences depends on the legal framework between the involved countries and the nature of the alleged crime.

Extradition for Tax Offences: Key Legal Considerations

Extradition Treaty Provisions

Some treaties explicitly exclude fiscal offences like tax evasion from the list of extraditable crimes. However, modern treaties increasingly include tax and financial offences, especially when they relate to money laundering, fraud, or corruption.

Principle of Dual Criminality

The act must be a criminal offence in both countries. If the alleged tax offence is punishable under the laws of both the requesting and requested country, extradition may proceed.

Severity and Intent

Minor tax offences or civil violations are typically not extraditable. However, serious offences involving fraud, deliberate evasion, or large-scale revenue loss can meet the threshold for extradition.

Link to Other Crimes

Tax offences that are connected to money laundering, organized crime, terrorism financing, or corruption are more likely to be considered extraditable.

Case-by-Case Judicial Review

Courts in the requested country evaluate whether the offence is covered under their extradition laws, and whether the person will receive a fair trial and humane treatment in the requesting country.

OECD and FATF Influence

Global frameworks like the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) and FATF recommendations encourage states to treat tax offences as serious, thereby enhancing international cooperation on extradition for such crimes.

Example

A businessman in India is accused of evading taxes worth ₹500 crore and has fled to a European country. India requests extradition based on a bilateral treaty that includes financial crimes. The host country’s court examines whether tax evasion is punishable under its laws and whether the case involves deliberate fraud. Finding sufficient grounds and compliance with dual criminality, the court allows extradition, stressing the scale of evasion and its impact on public finance.

Conclusion:

Yes, a person can be extradited for tax offences—provided the offence is serious, recognized as a crime in both countries, and included in the applicable extradition treaty. As global financial crimes grow more complex, nations are increasingly treating tax offences as extraditable to uphold fiscal integrity and deter white-collar crime.

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