Have you seen "A Landscape of Lies" yet?
The Internet Movie Database listing for the independent British film describes it as a crime thriller
about a Gulf War veteran seeking justice for a murdered combat comrade.
The movie went straight to DVD in 2011, but it did have some U.S. fans. It won a Silver Ace award at the 2012 Las Vegas Film Festival.
United Kingdom tax officials, however, gave it a much harsher review.
British tax collectors say the movie was a fake production, hastily cobbled together while the faux filmmakers were out on bail as a way to avoid tax fraud charges.
Insert your own "Argo" tax joke here.
The theatrical maneuvering didn't work.
Five people now face jail sentences, reports the AP, after being convicted
of attempting to bilk the British government of £2.8 million
($4.2 million) in movie related tax breaks.
The movie started as a sham, said prosecutors
and tax authorities, as a way to claim almost
£1.5 million in goods and services tax for work that had not been
done, as well as £1.3 million pounds under a government program that
allows filmmakers to claim back up to 25 percent of their expenditure
as tax relief.
When Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs officials (the U.K.'s version of our Internal Revenue Service) became suspicious, the group threw together the fake movie they had used to claim the tax breaks.
While it was enough for the Nevada film festival judges, it didn't impress the British legal system.
The tax fraud producers perpetrators, were found guilty of conspiracy to deceive the public revenue. They are first people
convicted of defrauding the British Film Commission's tax relief
program.
Bashar Al-Issa, 34, from London; Aoife Madden, 31, from
Northern Ireland; Tariq Hassan, 52, from Essex; and Ian Sherwood, 53, and
Osama Al Baghdady, 42, both from Manchester, are scheduled to be sentenced on March 25.
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