Firm used fictitious transactions and overestimated the cost of produce it purchased to get tax credit, authorities have said
Ukrainian law enforcement officials have seized more than $5 million from a company supplying food to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, as part of an inquiry into a suspected tax-evasion scheme, the nation’s Economic Security Bureau (BEB) reported on Friday.
Stacks of cash were found in the company accountant’s car when it was intercepted by security officials in Kiev Region. The BEB also reported that she sought to hide a “black cash register” and to conceal the firm’s illicit operations during the investigation.
The authorities published photos of the woman’s car trunk filled with numerous bundles of euro banknotes. According to BEB, the seized sum amounted to €4.7 million ($5.13 million). Searches were also conducted at the firm’s premises and in the apartments of some of its staff members.
The BEB did not name the company in question but said that it provided food supplies to the Ukrainian military under Defense Ministry contracts. Between 2022 and 2023, the company delivered food products to the Defense Ministry worth 14.5 billion hryvnia ($352 million), the bureau said.
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At that time, the authorities also obtained data on some non-commodity transactions made by the company that had “signs of fictitiousness,” the BEB statement continued. According to investigators, the firm unjustifiably inflated its expenses to get tax credit through falsified documentation and by overestimating the prices of the goods it was purchasing. The scheme allowed it to avoid taxes “on a particularly large scale.”
Ukraine has been plagued by corruption and embezzlement for years. The ongoing conflict with Russia has made the problem even more apparent. Kiev’s Western backers have repeatedly voiced their concerns over the issue, while the Ukrainian military has been rocked by several high-profile procurement scandals in recent months.