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The Income Tax department on 11 May filed four chargesheets against former Union finance minister P Chidambaram's wife Nalini, son Karti, daughter-in-law Srinidhi and a firm under the Black Money Act for allegedly not disclosing their foreign assets.
Nalini Chidambaram, Karti and Srinidhi, and a firm linked to Karti have been charged for allegedly not disclosing, either partly or fully, immovable assets like the one at Barton, Cambridge in the UK worth Rs 5.37 crore, property worth Rs 80 lakh in the same country, and assets worth Rs 3.28 crore in the US, they said.
The Chidambarams and the firm, on 27 April, had sent four separate replies to the specified Income Tax department authority in Chennai, stating that they had not defaulted in disclosing these assets to the taxman, and in certain cases, they had revised their Income Tax returns to reflect the said overseas properties.
All the four, including the firm, in more or less similar replies, told the department that there was "no failure to disclose any information about the foreign assets, and certainly no wilful failure to disclose any information."
The case pertains to the assessment year 2016-17.
The chargesheets are expected to be taken up by the court on 11 June.
The black money law was brought by the Modi government in 2015, as part of its drive to prosecute Indians who have stashed illicit wealth abroad.
The department had also recently issued notices to Karti and his family members in the case which they had challenged before the Madras High Court.
Karti had refused to join the probe, stating that he had already submitted the details of the assets and related transactions undertaken in 2017 to another tax authority, and that "parallel proceedings" cannot take place against an individual under the same law.
The income tax department had slapped the Black Money Act on Karti in 2017 after it found that assets created by him abroad were in alleged violation of law.
The new anti-black money law deals with cases of overseas illegal assets, which till recently were probed under the Income Tax Act, 1961.
The new legislation has provisions for a steep 120 percent tax and penalty on undisclosed foreign assets and income, besides carrying a jail term of up to 10 years.
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Published: 11 May 2018,10:55 PM IST