Google’s Paris office raided in French tax probe
French investigators raided Google’s Paris headquarters on Tuesday as part of a tax evasion inquiry, the financial prosecutor’s office said.
Google said it was fully complying with French law.
Facing public anger at the way multinational companies use their footprints around the world to minimize tax, France, Britain and others have sought ways to make sure Google, Yahoo and other digital giants, which often have their tax bases in other countries, pay their taxes locally.
Investigators from the financial prosecutor’s office and France’s central office against corruption and tax fraud, accompanied by 25 IT specialists, took part in the raid.
“The investigation aims to verify whether Google Ireland has a permanent base in France and if, by not declaring parts of its activities carried out in France, it failed its fiscal obligations, including on corporate tax and value added tax,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
Google has based its regional headquarters in Dublin, where corporate tax rates are lower than elsewhere in Europe.
The company, now part of Alphabet, has been under pressure in recent years over its practice of channeling most profits from European clients through Ireland to Bermuda, where it pays no tax on them.
The raid was carried out as part of an investigation that started in June last year.
“We are cooperating with the authorities to answer their questions,” Al Verney, a spokesman for Google in Europe, said in an email. Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, approached for a reaction at a conference in Amsterdam, declined to comment.
Investigators started their investigation of Google’s offices in central Paris at 5 a.m., a source close to the finance ministry said.
France is seeking some $1.8 billion in back taxes from the US Internet giant Google, criticized for its use of aggressive tax-lowering techniques, another finance ministry source had said in February.
Google had agreed in January to pay 130 million pounds ($190 million) in back taxes to Britain, prompting criticism from opposition lawmakers and campaigners.