Italian tax police meet fashion police: Dolce & Gabbana trial, Boss castle seizure

November 15, 2012

Evading taxes apparently is in fashion in Italy.

Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana, founders of luxe Italian fashion
house Dolce & Gabbana, are scheduled to go on trial in December for tax evasion.

The designers allegedly avoided Italian taxes when they sold their business
in 2004 to a Luxembourg-based holding company, Gado Srl, that tax officials contend they created specifically for tax evasion purposes.

Meanwhile, the fashion houses of Hugo Boss and Valentino also are tax trouble.

Italy's tax police revealed earlier this month that had confiscated $83.5 million worth of land, holdings and real estate, including a 15th century castle.

Castle Neuschwanstein via European Castle Tours This isn't the castle seized in connection with the Boss/Valentino alleged tax evasion case, but isn't it gorgeous? It's Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria. Photo courtesy European Castles Tours.

The assets, say tax officials, are from 13 people "linked to one of Italy's most
important families in the fashion and textile sector" and who are reportedly under investigation are suspected of not having filed tax returns.

These two high-profile forays into the allegedly illegal tax dealings of haute couture darlings is the latest effort by Italy to avoid becoming the next Greece. To prevent a similar fiscal meltdown as its Mediterranean neighbor, Italian leaders are looking at ways to catch tax evaders.

For the last few years, Italian officials have been cracking down on yacht owners whom they believe bought the luxury boats with money they didn't report to the national tax office.

And even the Catholic Church, whose independent Vatican City is located within Rome, is not immune to scrutiny by Italian tax officials. They've also explored ways to collect taxes on not the church's vast property holdings that are not directly related to religious endeavors.

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