No directive for audit review on RM1 million received by Shahrir, IRB officer says


An Inland Revenue Board officer tells the KL High Court today that the it did not conduct an audit on the RM1 million allegedly received by Shahrir Ab Samad (pictured) from Najib Razak as there were no instructions to do so. – The Malaysian Insight file pic, November 4, 2022.

AN Inland Revenue Board (IRB) officer told the Kuala Lumpur High Court today that the IRB did not conduct an audit on the RM1 million allegedly received by Shahrir Ab Samad from Najib Razak.

Tuan Zulkifli Tuan Lah, 48, deputy head of the Celebrity, Public and Various Entertainers Desk Audit Unit, IRB assessment division, said his superior had not instructed him to carry out the review following a complaint lodged by an investigating officer of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC).

He said this when cross-examined by lawyer Syed Faisal Al-Edros Syed Abdullah Al-Edros, who is representing Shahrir in the former Johor Baru MP’s trial on a charge of failing to declare to IRB RM1 million he received from the former prime minister via an AmIslamic Bank Berhad cheque dated November 27, 2013.

Syed Faisal: Tuan Zul (Zulkifli) informed a superior officer that Shahrir had received RM1 million as told by the investigating officer, but there was no instruction from the officer to carry out an audit review on the money?

Tuan Zulkifli: No instruction because the complaint (from the MACC officer) was made verbally and not in writing.

The 21st prosecution witness said personally he agreed that Shahrir was charged in court before IRB undertook investigations, adding that Shahrir and the party who deposited the money were not interviewed.

Tuan Zulkifli also agreed with the lawyer’s suggestion that the IRB did not implement nine necessary measures to check the status of the RM1 million, whether it should be reported as an income or otherwise because there were no instructions to do so by his superior.

He said the IRB should have issued a letter to the taxpayer requesting additional documents for an audit and if the board does not receive the documents, the taxpayer should have been called in for an interview to determine the veracity of the declaration, among others.

He said the nine measures should have been implemented before the charge was brought against Shahrir.

Tuan Zulkifli also agreed with Shahrir’s other lawyer, Firoz Hussein Ahmad Jamaluddin, that the accused was not charged under section 113 of the Income Tax Act 1967 and no penalty was imposed under the section.

According to Tuan Zulkifli, the IRB has never conducted an additional assessment on the self-assessment made by Shahrir for the year 2013.

“To me, for an offence like this (not reporting income), there needs to be a review first. If (there is) something wrong then we take action. If there is no action (review), we cannot confirm whether the individual reported (income) or vice versa,” he said.

The witness also agreed that in declaring an income, the taxpayer himself determines the category of money he receives, whether it is an income or a reimbursement.

Shahrir, 72, is accused of money-laundering by not reporting his actual income in the income tax return form with regard to the RM1 million, which contravenes section 113(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act 1967.

He allegedly committed the act at the IRB Duta branch, Government Office Complex, Jalan Tuanku Abdul Halim on April 25, 2014.

The charge, framed under section 4(1) of the Anti-Money Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001, provides for a maximum RM5 million fine or imprisonment of up to five years, or both.

Hearing before judge Muhammad Jamil Hussin continues on December 13. – Bernama, November 4, 2022.


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