Question to the HM Treasury:
To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, how many prosecutions for money laundering offences HM Revenue and Customs have brought against individuals in each year since 2013; and how many of those prosecutions resulted in a conviction in each of those years.
HMRC takes a flexible and dynamic resourcing approach to criminally investigating suspected tax crimes and associated money laundering. While HMRC is not a prosecuting authority, we prepare the cases to the highest evidential standard and pass the case to the relevant independent prosecuting authority to decide if the case satisfies the two-stage test for prosecution.
The following is aggregate data for HMRC’s investigations, since 2013 that resulted in a prosecution and conviction for either money laundering offences as set out in Part 7 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, or prosecutable breaches of supervisory requirement in various versions of the Money Laundering Regulations.
Year | No. of positive charging decisions[2] | No. of convictions[3] |
2012-13 | 23 | 10 |
2013-14 | 33 | 33 |
2014-15 | 30 | 17 |
2015-16 | 65 | 32 |
2016-17 | 29 | 35 |
2017-18 | 80 | 18 |
2018-19 | 69 | 32 |
2019-20 | 25 | 31 |
2020-21 | 22 | 19 |
2021-22 | 19 | 24 |
2022-23 | 34 | 32 |
To note, criminal investigations can take considerable time to progress and can conclude in a year other than the one in which they are opened. As such there is no direct correlation between yearly figures presented in the table.
[2]cases where the prosecuting authority has agreed to a money laundering or money laundering regulations charge against defendants.
[3] successfully concluded criminal investigations.