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  • L.A. Public Works lost a tool that can cause radiation poisoning. A resident found it

    L.A. Public Works lost a tool that can cause radiation poisoning. A resident found it

    A potentially dangerous device that uses radiation went missing last week, but was found Monday and returned to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works.

    The agency had issued a $1,000 reward over the weekend for information that could lead to the recovery of the device, which could cause radiation poisoning if damaged or mishandled.

    The device was last seen around 4 p.m. Thursday in the back of a county truck near 110th Street East and Avenue R-4 in the unincorporated Antelope Valley community of Littlerock.

    Public Works described the device as a thin layer density gauge, which is used during construction to measure soil and asphalt density.

    On Monday afternoon, a resident contacted the office of Supt. Kathryn Barger, whose district includes Littlerock, to report they had found an item that matched the description of the device. Public Works crews were dispatched to the address and recovered the tool, determining it had not been damaged, according to agency spokesman Kerjon Lee.

    “We’re thrilled that it’s been returned,” Lee said.

    In a statement, Barger said she urged Public Works to report a corrective action plan to the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to prevent this from happening in the future.

    “It’s a big relief to know that no one was hurt by radiation sickness in the process of recovering it,” Barger said. “However, this cannot happen again.”

    Jeremy Childs

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  • A $10-million 'spicy situation': Thousands of pounds of meth, cocaine hidden in jalapeño paste

    A $10-million 'spicy situation': Thousands of pounds of meth, cocaine hidden in jalapeño paste

    They covered themselves with hazmat suits, gloves and masks and put plastic bags over their boots. That’s how dangerous the substance was that U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers were examining Wednesday morning.

    A cadre of agents — veterans who had seized fentanyl, heroin and other illicit narcotics in previous raids — dug deep, hands and boots in a sea of pungent material, before hitting pay dirt.

    What agents said they found was almost 2 tons of methamphetamine and cocaine — valued at $10.4 million — buried within dozens of vats of fiery jalapeño paste. The cargo was seized from a commercial tractor-trailer near the Otay Mesa border.

    “It was an extremely spicy situation,” Michael Scappechio, a CBP spokesperson, told The Times. “You never really know what you’re dealing with just in terms of dangerous narcotics and then you throw in there all that organic material; we had to break out the full PPE,” or personal protective equipment.

    A 28-year-old man with valid border-crossing credentials was stopped Wednesday around 10:36 a.m. by agents while hauling his cargo. The individual was a Mexican national, according to Scappechio.

    His electronic shipment manifest listed only vats of jalapeño paste among his consignment.

    Customs officers decided to review the man’s haul.

    In total, 349 packages of methamphetamine and cocaine weighing 3,684 pounds were seized.

    (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

    “We won’t expose the reasons that led to the further examination,” Scappechio said, “but agent suspicion is often used.”

    The truck was moved from the border to the nearby screening facility, where a K-9 unit then screened the cargo and alerted agents for a full inspection.

    There, they poured out barrel-sized drums of jalapeño paste, removing 349 suspicious packages from the vats. About 3,161 pounds of methamphetamine and 523 pounds of cocaine were extracted from the haul.

    The driver was turned over to the Department of Homeland Security for arrest and processing while the CBP seized the drugs and trailer.

    Never underestimate the power of a dog’s nose.

    “Our K-9 teams are an invaluable component of our counter-narcotics operations, providing a reliable and unequaled mobile detection capability,” said Rosa Hernandez in a statement. The Otay Mesa port director said the CBP had stepped up its efforts “to secure communities and stifle the growth of transnational criminal organizations, one seizure after another.”

    Last month, San Diego’s field office seized more than 14,000 pounds of narcotics at California’s land borders.

    But what’s going to happen to all that jalapeño paste?

    Scappechio said he couldn’t say for certain but noted that the agency was “not going to hold organic material for too long” before destroying it. He did say the owner could petition to retrieve the property.

    “Since the jalapeño paste was laden with dangerous drugs,” Scappechio said, “I wouldn’t hold my breath.”

    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Zelenskyy sends strong signals with choice for Ukraine’s new defense chief

    Zelenskyy sends strong signals with choice for Ukraine’s new defense chief

    KYIV ­— Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s choice for the country’s new defense minister sends two clear signals to Ukraine’s allies and adversaries: Kyiv is serious about cleaning up corruption, and steadfast about regaining Crimea from Russian control.

    Rustem Umerov, whom Zelenskyy has put forward to replace Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov, is a Crimean Tatar with deep business and political experience, including chairing Ukraine’s commission monitoring international financial and military aid to the country’s war effort. As head of the State Property Fund since last year, he has revitalized the country’s privatization efforts.

    The defense ministry “needs new approaches,” Zelenskyy said in dismissing Reznikov, whose ministry has been plagued by corruption allegations. Reznikov himself hasn’t been implicated, but the controversy has tainted the ministry.

    Umerov, 41, will become the first Muslim and Crimean Tatar to gain such a high post in the Ukrainian government. In addition to his financial acumen, Umerov’s appointment will mean a deeper integration of the Crimean Tatar community into decision-making in Kyiv. It also clearly indicates Ukraine’s adamant determination to take Crimea back.

    The planned change is the highest-level shake-up in Zelenskyy’s administration since Russia launched its all-out invasion in February 2022. Zelenskyy called on the Ukrainian legislature to approve the decision as soon as possible.

    “The ministry needs new approaches and other formats of interaction with both the military and society at large,” Zelenskyy said late Sunday. “Autumn is a time for strengthening,” he added.

    Umerov, founder of investment company ASTEM and a Ukrainian MP, has been one of the most prominent advocates of Ukraine’s re-occupation of Crimea, illegally annexed by Russia in 2014. In addition to working as a head of the State Property Fund since 2022, he has been actively taking part in international negotiations, including with Russia.

    “He is a strong manager with a strategic vision, who has well-established international connections in the U.S., the European Union, the Arab world, Turkey, and the countries of Central Asia,” said Refat Chubarov, chairman of the Mejlis, the political representative body of the Crimean Tatars in exile.

    “Such a high appointment is a good signal for Crimean Tatars’ integration into Ukrainian government structures, and also a great responsibility for the native community,” Chubarov told POLITICO.

    Umerov’s prospective appointment was praised by anti-corruption advocates, who have been critical of Reznikov for a string of army procurement corruption scandals at the defense ministry.

    “I was pleasantly surprised by Rustem’s role in non-public advocacy of weapons for Ukraine. He often very quietly did the things that had failed in the Defense Ministry during the last year and a half,” Daria Kaleniuk, acting director of the Anti-Corruption Action Center, a Kyiv-based watchdog, said in a statement.

    Kaleniuk also praised Umerov’s performance as the head of the State Property Fund. Kyiv raised record proceeds from selling small state assets in the first quarter of 2023 despite Moscow’s invasion, Umerov said in May. So far this year, “more than 2,000 entrepreneurs got the opportunity for business development,” Umerov said in a report in late August.

    “We saw only positive results in one of the country’s once most corrupt sewers,” Kaleniuk added.

    Veronika Melkozerova

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  • Join our Financial Services Tax webinar relating to high interest rates, withholding tax reclaims, Pillar 2 and VAT updates on 31 May 2023 at 8.30 am CET – Banking blog

    Join our Financial Services Tax webinar relating to high interest rates, withholding tax reclaims, Pillar 2 and VAT updates on 31 May 2023 at 8.30 am CET – Banking blog

    We would like to invite you to our upcoming webinar on high interest rates, withholding tax reclaims, Pillar 2 and VAT updates on Wednesday 31 May 2023 at 08.30am.

    The focus of our upcoming webinar will be on the following topics:

    • Overview of the tax regulatory landscape
    • The impact of volatility and the high interest rate environment on transfer pricing
    • Swiss withholding tax reclaims: latest developments
    • OECD Pillar 2 overview of what we are seeing in the market
    • National and international VAT updates, CESOP development

    Register for this webinar

    We look forward to welcoming you to an informative and insightful webinar. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

    Key contacts

    Brani

    Brandi Caruso – Partner, Financial Services Tax & Legal

    Brandi heads Deloitte’s Financial Services Tax team in Switzerland and Liechtenstein. She has extensive expertise in advising the Swiss financial services industry on the implementation of US and international transparency regimes (including QI, FATCA, Section 871(m), CRS, MDR and DAC6). Brandi also leads the Financial Services Tax team’s efforts relating to innovative technology solutions. Brandi is a US Certified Public Accountant and has 20 years of experience with Deloitte and has worked in London, San Diego and Zurich.

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    Georgy Galumov_blog

    George Galumov – Partner, Transfer Pricing and Value Chain Alignment

    George is a Transfer Pricing and Value Chain Alignment Partner with more than 14 years of transfer pricing experience covering tax and transfer pricing aspects of various intra-group transactions, including business model and transaction flow design, M&A activity, as well as, more mainstream transfer pricing documentation and planning engagements. George has worked with a number of leading multinational corporations including FTSE 100 companies, leading energy and resources companies, financial services institutions and private equity owned businesses. George has an MSc in Energy Trading and Finance from Cass Business School and is a holder of the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.

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    Ilan Rom – Partner, Financial Services Tax & Legal

    Ilan Rom has over 20 years experience in the Swiss insurance and re-insurance industries and is a tax expert with deep knowledge in the area of Insurance/Reinsurance, Treasury, Asset Management, Corporate Restructuring, M&A, VAT, Transfer Pricing and Tax Reporting.

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    Constant Dimitriou – Director, Indirect Tax

    Constant is a Director leading the Indirect Tax practice in Romandie (Geneva and Lausanne). He has 15+ years of experience in EU and Swiss VAT covering all industries with a focus on the trading and FSI sectors. He advises Swiss and foreign multinationals notably on complex supply chain projects (structuring and optimization), internal processes and controls, systems, VAT audits and VAT compliance. Constant regularly intervenes as external speaker on VAT matters and has been listed as a Swiss Indirect Tax Leader in the International Tax Review for many years.

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    Danielle Koyuncu – Director, Financial Services Tax

    Danielle is a Director in the financial services Swiss tax team, specialized in advising financial institutions in the banking, insurance and asset management investment area. Danielle is a Swiss Certified Tax Expert with more than 15 years of experience in corporate international taxation and Swiss VAT. She holds a university degree in Business Administration and Master of Law of the University of Bern.

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    Lena Woodward

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  • The EU and UK have a Northern Ireland deal — so what’s in it?

    The EU and UK have a Northern Ireland deal — so what’s in it?

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    LONDON — After four months of intense talks (and plenty of squabbling before that), the EU and U.K. have a deal to resolve their long-running post-Brexit trade row over Northern Ireland.

    But as U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak works to sell the so-called “Windsor framework” on the Northern Ireland protocol to Brexiteers and unionists, lawmakers on both sides of the English Channel and of the Irish Sea are getting to grips with the details.

    From paperwork to plants, let POLITICO walk you through the new agreement, asking: Who has given ground, and how exactly will the deal thrashed out by EU and U.K. negotiators aim to keep the bloc’s prized single market secure?

    Customs paperwork and checks

    For businesses taking part in an expanded “trusted trader scheme,” the Windsor framework aims to considerably cut customs paperwork and checks on goods moving from Great Britain but destined to stay in Northern Ireland. 

    These goods will pass through a “green lane” requiring minimal paperwork and be labeled “Not for EU,” while those heading for the EU single market in the Republic of Ireland will undergo full EU customs checks in Northern Ireland’s ports under a “red lane.”

    Traders in the green lane will only need to complete a single, digitized certificate per truck movement, rather than multiple forms per load.

    Sunak has already claimed that this means “any sense of a border in the Irish Sea” — deeply controversial among Northern Ireland’s unionist politicians — has now been “removed.”

    However, it’s by no means a total end to Irish Sea red tape. An EU official said that although the deal delivers a “dramatic reduction” in the number of physical food safety checks, for example, there will still be some — those seen as “essential” to avoid the risk of goods entering the single market.

    These checks will be based on risk assessments and intelligence, and aimed at preventing smuggling and criminality.

    U.K. public health and safety standards will meanwhile apply to all retail food and drink within the U.K. internal market. British rules on public health, marketing, organics, labeling, genetic modification, and drinks such as wines, spirits and mineral waters will apply in Northern Ireland. This will remove more than 60 EU food and drink rules in the original protocol, which were detailed in more than 1,000 pages of legislation.

    Supermarkets, wholesalers, hospitality and food producers are likely to welcome the new arrangements. Many had stopped supplying to Northern Ireland because the cost of filling out hundreds of certificates for each consignment was deemed too high for a market as small as Northern Ireland. 

    Export declarations have been removed for the vast majority of goods moving from Northern Ireland to Great Britain.

    The EU’s safeguards: While offering to drastically reduce the volume of checks carried out, the EU has toughened its criteria to become a trusted trader under the expanded scheme. The EU will now have access to databases tracking shipments of goods between Great Britain and Northern Ireland in real time. The system was tested through the winter, helping build trust in Brussels, and is being fed with data from traders and U.K. authorities. The European Commission will be able to suspend part or all of these trade easements if the U.K. fails to comply with the new rules.

    The timeline: The U.K. government said it will consult with businesses in the “coming months” before implementing the new rules. The green lane will come into force this fall. Labels for meat, meat products and minimally-processed dairy products such as fresh milk will come into force from October 1, 2024. All relevant products will be marked by July 1, 2025. “Shelf-stable” products like bread and pasta will not be labeled.

    Governance

    A key plank of the deal is the bid to address complaints by Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) — currently boycotting the power-sharing assembly in the region in opposition to the protocol — that lawmakers there did not have a say in the imposition of new EU rules in the region.

    Under the terms of the new agreement, the Commission will have to give the U.K. government notice of future EU regulations intended to apply in Northern Ireland. According to Sunak, Stormont will be given a new power to “pull an emergency brake on changes to EU goods rules” based on “cross-community consent.”

    Under this mechanism, the U.K. government will be able to suspend the application in Northern Ireland of an incoming piece of EU law at the request of at least 30 members of the assembly — a third of them. But if unionist parties in Northern Ireland want to trigger the new “Stormont brake,” they must first return to the power-sharing institutions which they abandoned last May. The EU and the U.K. could subsequently agree to apply such a rule in a meeting of the Joint Committee, which oversees the protocol.

    Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said this new tool remains an emergency mechanism that hopefully will not need to be used. A second EU official said it would be triggered “under the most exceptional circumstances and as a matter of last resort in a well-defined process” set out in a unilateral declaration by the U.K. These include that the rules have a “significant and lasting impact on the everyday lives” of people in the region.

    If the EU disagrees with the U.K.’s trigger of the Stormont brake, the two would resolve the issue through independent arbitration, instead of involving the Court of Justice of the EU.

    Meanwhile, Northern Ireland’s courts will consider disputes over the application of EU rules in the region, and judges could decide whether to consult the CJEU on how to interpret them. In a key concession, the Commission has agreed not to unilaterally refer a case to the CJEU, although it retains the power to do so.

    The EU’s safeguards: The CJEU will remain the “sole and ultimate arbiter of EU law” and will have the “final say” on EU single market disputes, von der Leyen stressed. Whether Brexiteers and the DUP are willing to accept that remains the million-dollar question.

    Tax, state aid and EU rules

    The U.K. government will now be able to set rules in areas such as VAT and state aid that will also apply in Northern Ireland — two major wins for Sunak that were rejected by the Commission in previous rounds of negotiations with other U.K. prime ministers.

    It will, Sunak was at pains to point out Monday, allow Westminster to pass on a cut in alcohol duty that previously passed Northern Ireland by.

    But London has had to give up on its idea of establishing a dual-regulatory mechanism that would have allowed Northern Ireland businesses to choose whether they would follow EU or British rules when manufacturing goods, depending on whether they intended to sell them in the EU single market or in the U.K. The whole idea was deemed by Brussels as impossible to police.

    The EU’s safeguards: Northern Irish businesses producing goods for the U.K. internal market will only have to follow “less than 3 percent” of EU single market rules, a U.K. official said. But the nature of these regulations remains unclear, and there will be increased market surveillance and enforcement by U.K. authorities to try and reassure the EU.

    The timeline: The U.K. government will be able to exercise these powers as soon as the Windsor framework comes into force.

    Parcels

    The EU and the U.K. have agreed to scrap customs processes for parcels being sent between consumers in Great Britain to Northern Ireland.

    The EU’s safeguards: Parcels sent between businesses will now move through the new green lane, as is the case for other goods destined to stay in Northern Ireland. That should allow them to be monitored, but remove the need to undergo international customs procedures. Parcel operators will share commercial data with the U.K.’s tax authority, HMRC, in a bid to reduce risks to the EU single market.

    Timeline: These new arrangements will take effect September 2024.

    Pets

    Residents in Great Britain will be able to take their dogs, cats and ferrets to Northern Ireland without having to fulfill a requirement for a rabies vaccine, tapeworm treatment and other checks.

    Pets traveling from Northern Ireland to Great Britain and back will not be required to have any documentation, declarations, checks or health treatments.

    The EU’s safeguards: Microchipped pets will be able to travel with a life-long pet travel document issued for free by the U.K.’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Pet owners will tick a box in their travel booking acknowledging they accept the scheme rules and will not move their pet into the EU.

    The timeline: The new rules will take effect fall 2023.

    Medicines

    Drugs approved for use by the U.K.’s medicines regulator, the MHRA, will be automatically available in every pharmacy and hospital in Northern Ireland, “at the same time and under the same conditions” as in the U.K., von der Leyen said. 

    Businesses will need to secure approval for a U.K.-wide license from the MHRA to supply medicines to Northern Ireland, rather than having to go through the European Medicines Agency. The agreement removes any EU Falsified Medicines Directive packaging, labeling and barcode requirements for medicines. This means manufacturers will be able to produce a single medicines pack design for the whole of the U.K., including Northern Ireland.

    Drugs being shipped into Northern Ireland from Great Britain will be freed of customs paperwork, checks and duties, with traders only being required to provide ordinary commercial information.

    The EU’s safeguards: Medicines traveling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland will do so via the new green lane, which will have monitoring to protect the single market built in.

    The timeline: The U.K. government said it will engage with the medicines industry soon on these changes.

    Plants

    The deal lifts the protocol’s ban on seed potatoes entering Northern Ireland from Great Britain, and its prohibition on trees and shrubs deemed of “high risk” for the EU single market. This will enable garden centers and other businesses in Northern Ireland to sell 11 native species to Great Britain and some from other regions.

    The Windsor framework also removes sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) checks on all these plants, and ditches red tape on their shipment into Northern Ireland.

    The EU’s safeguards: Supplying businesses will have to obtain a Northern Ireland plant health label, which will be the same as the plant passport already required within Great Britain, but with the addition of the words “for use in the U.K. only” and a QR code linking to the rules.

    The timeline: The new scheme and the lifting of the bans will all come into force in the fall.

    Cristina Gallardo

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  • Gujarat govt announces 2 free LPG cylinders a year

    Gujarat govt announces 2 free LPG cylinders a year

     

     Ahead of Diwali, the Gujarat government on Monday announced a reduction in VAT (Value Added Tax) on CNG and PNG by 10 per cent and said two cooking gas cylinders will be given free every year to 38 lakh beneficiaries who have got gas connections under the Centre’s Ujjwala scheme.

    The reduction in VAT on CNG (compressed natural gas), PNG (piped natural gas) and two free liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders to Ujjwala scheme beneficiaries every year, which will cost the state exchequer altogether Rs 1,650 crore, come at a time when Assembly polls are just a few month away in Gujarat.

    Our government has reduced VAT on CNG and PNG by 10 per cent. This will help homemaker women, auto-rickshaw drivers and all those who are using CNG-run vehicles, state minister Jitu Vaghani said.

    VAT on CNG and PNG (used by households in kitchens) in Gujarat was 15 per cent and now the tax rate will come down to five per cent, industry sources said.

    This will reduce CNG prices by Rs 6 per kg and PNG rates by Rs 5 per standard cubic metre, he said, adding the state government will lose over Rs 1,000 crore in revenue with this tax cut.

    Around 38 lakh families have been given LPG connections under the Ujjwala scheme. The state government has decided to provide two gas cylinders to each of these families per year. This will cost the government Rs 650 crore per year, he said.

    This LPG subsidy will reach the account of the beneficiary within three days of purchase of cylinder, he said.

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  • Join our Financial Services tax webinar on 9 November 2022 at 08:30 to discuss legislative developments, court cases and practice – Banking blog

    Join our Financial Services tax webinar on 9 November 2022 at 08:30 to discuss legislative developments, court cases and practice – Banking blog

    We would like to invite you to our half yearly webinar where we provide key updates and discuss recent tax developments that are important for the financial services industry on Wednesday 9 November 2022 at 08:30.

    The focus of the webinar will be on the following topics:

    • The impact of the recent vote on Swiss withholding tax reform
    • Recent EU Court of Justice decisions and national and international VAT developments
    • Global updates relating to transfer pricing
    • OECD Pillar 2 developments
    • Renegotiation of the double tax treaty between Switzerland and the USA

    Please register for this webinar.

    We look forward to welcoming you to an informative and insightful webinar. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

    Key contacts

    Brani

    Brandi Caruso – Partner, Financial Services Tax & Legal

    Brandi heads Deloitte’s Financial Services Tax team in Switzerland and Liechtenstein. She has extensive expertise in advising the Swiss financial services industry on the implementation of US and international transparency regimes (including QI, FATCA, Section 871(m), CRS, MDR and DAC6). Brandi also leads the Financial Services Tax team’s efforts relating to innovative technology solutions. Brandi is a US Certified Public Accountant and has 20 years of experience with Deloitte and has worked in London, San Diego and Zurich.

    Email

    Georgy Galumov_blog

    George Galumov – Partner, Transfer Pricing and Value Chain Alignment

    George is a Transfer Pricing and Value Chain Alignment Partner with more than 14 years of transfer pricing experience covering tax and transfer pricing aspects of various intra-group transactions, including business model and transaction flow design, M&A activity, as well as, more mainstream transfer pricing documentation and planning engagements. George has worked with a number of leading multinational corporations including FTSE 100 companies, leading energy and resources companies, financial services institutions and private equity owned businesses. George has an MSc in Energy Trading and Finance from Cass Business School and is a holder of the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.

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    Photo DK_110

    Danielle Koyuncu – Director, Financial Services Tax

    Danielle is a Director in the financial services Swiss tax team, specialized in advising financial institutions in the banking, insurance and asset management investment area. Danielle is a Swiss Certified Tax Expert with more than 15 years of experience in corporate international taxation and Swiss VAT. She holds a university degree in Business Administration and Master of Law of the University of Bern.

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    Maja Magnard – Director, Tax & Legal

    Maja Magnard is a Director in our Corporate Tax practice focussing on the French speaking part of Switzerland, with 14 years of professional experience. Maja has significant professional experience as an international corporate tax specialist both in Financial services industry and the industrial field, in the area of M&A, cross border structuring, business reorganisations and negotiating tax rulings with the Swiss tax authorities at all levels for various types of taxes. Maja is a Swiss Certified Tax Expert, member of the Certified Tax Expert Organization and Expert for the Swiss Tax Academy exams.

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    Matthias Hohn3

    Matthias Höhn – Senior Manager, Financial Services Tax & Legal

    Matthias is the key contact person in the German speaking region of Switzerland for VAT related questions in the financial sector. He has over six years of experience with Deloitte and holds a LL.M. VAT from the Kalaidos Technical University and Master of Law from the University of Zurich. In the Swiss financial services industry he has supported clients in various VAT matters, including M&A advisory, compliance and rulings with the Swiss Federal Tax Administration.

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    Lena Woodward

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