Last month a Tauranga man by the name of James Allen Kent was sentenced to 12 months' home detention with his sick wife after stealing half a million dollars.
Your eyebrows probably raised at this but when I tell you the victim was the Inland Revenue, your outrage may subside. But it shouldn't.
There is a view among some in the legal and accounting communities that there is no morality in tax law. Avoiding tax is considered an acceptable use of some of the best accounting and legal minds in the land and this permissive attitude appears to extend to the judiciary's view of those who break tax laws.
Kent was a contractor, employing staff and sub-contractors on a Tauranga bridge development. Rather than deduct PAYE payments, or even file returns, Kent simply paid his staff cash and hoped for the best. He took the same cavalier approach to his GST obligations.
Under the law, Kent was liable for up to five years' jail for each offence. He received 37 convictions.