VAT fraudster stole almost £10 million to fund luxury lifestyle

VAT fraudster stole almost £10 million to fund luxury lifestyle

A businessman who masterminded a £9.8 million international VAT scam used his fraudulent gains to fund a lifestyle of sports cars and a luxury Spanish home.

Jason Butler, 46, used stolen money to buy vehicles including a Ferrari Fiorano FI, a Ferrari 360, a Mercedes SL350, and a Lamborghini Murcielago, HM Revenue and Customs said.

He also owned a Rolls Royce Silver Shadow, a speedboat, a luxurious home in Marbella and 96 properties in Leeds.

HMRC confirmed that Butler, formerly of Leeds, was jailed for nine years on Monday at Leeds Crown Court.

Jason Butler VAT fraud case
Jason Butler, and two of the Ferrari sports cars that he bought using stolen money through a VAT scam (HMRC/PA)

He told investigators that he bought almost £60 million worth of personal data, relating to Payment Protection Insurance (PPI), but was really trading cheap raw data and forging purchase invoices to falsely reclaim VAT.

Eden Noblett, Assistant Director, Fraud Investigation Service, HMRC said: “Butler thought he was clever and his scam too sophisticated to be uncovered. But, he was not as clever as he believed.

“This was a complex fraud involving offshore companies and moving money internationally. This case should serve as a warning to anyone considering stealing taxpayer’s money. No matter how clever and sophisticated you think your fraud is, we will catch you.”

Mr Noblett said: “Butler stole enough money to pay for more than 500 new NHS nurses. We will not allow anyone to steal funding from our schools and hospitals.”

HMRC said Butler ran a number of companies in Yorkshire, which were part of Jump Group Ltd, before he moved to Spain.

The spokesman said he bought and sold valuable PPI customer data from nine UK companies via an international agency which he also controlled, between November 2011 and January 2015.

But, he said, checks with the companies revealed that no trade ever took place and Butler had created hundreds of phoney invoices.

Instead he was buying and selling cheap raw data to a series of firms in the UK, who then sold it to a respectable data company in Gibraltar.

The data was sold by them to a company in the United States, which was also controlled by Butler.

The fake purchases were used to falsely reclaim £9,875,806 in VAT.

Butler was arrested by police at Manchester Airport when he arrived into the UK from Malaga in January 2015.

He was found guilty of VAT fraud at a previous hearing, HMRC said.

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