Ideasroom

The hypocrisy of NZ’s approach to fraud

If we want to live in a fair society where people are treated equally, we need our justice system to deliver fair, transparent and equivalent sentences to equivalent crimes, writes Victoria University's Lisa Marriott



On 28 April, the headline “Husband and wife sentenced for one of NZ’s ‘highest ranking’ benefit frauds” ran with a report of one of New Zealand’s “very worst” cases of benefit fraud, in which a Nelson mother of four was sentenced to two years and five months in prison for defrauding the Ministry of Social Development of $244,768 over 12 years. The woman's husband was sentenced to nine months’ home detention for fraud of $84,915 over the same period. The judge in the case is quoted as reaching an outcome “that might be viewed as ‘overly generous’”. Repayment of $10,000 was ordered, at a rate of $40 per week.

Three days later, the same media website had the headline “Tax agent fraudster loses name suppression”. This case involved a Wellington tax agent given 10 months’ home detention and 120 hours’ community work for tax fraud of $768,538. The fraud had been ongoing since 2009. The agent’s financial position was described as “hopeless” and there was “no way she could pay reparation” despite individually benefitting $210,465 from the offending.

Let’s be clear about this: both crimes result in the same outcome for society, which is less money for other taxpayers. Whether the outcome is achieved by more money taken from the system or less money given to the system is a conceptual difference only. Both are deliberate. Both are fraud.

I went to a presentation by JustSpeak on Friday night in Wellington. The presentation was to launch the criminal justice organisation’s report Bailing out the Justice System: Reopening the Window of Opportunity. Among other things, this report questions why we need another prison.

Our prison population is now in excess of 10,000 people and last year it was announced we would spend $1 billion building another 1800 prison beds. You may be asking why. One of the reasons noted by JustSpeak is our policy of imprisoning people for what is (relatively) low-level financial fraud.

There is certainly no financial gain from the Nelson mother’s prison sentence — it costs more than $100,000 a year to keep someone in prison. While it is unlikely the full two-year, five-month sentence will be served (due to parole), if it was, the cost of the sentence would roughly equate to the amount of the offending. Is it a good use of taxpayer money to spend (potentially) another quarter of a million dollars to punish fraud of the same amount? If this is a good use of taxpayer money, why is it a good use for benefit fraud and not for tax fraud? Is something achieved by sending this woman to prison? If it is (eg. deterrence or retribution), why is this not also achieved by sending the tax agent to prison?

We have a Sentencing Act that outlines aggravating and mitigating factors that should be taken into account when determining a sentence. The same factors apply for tax or welfare fraud. One factor is particularly relevant for fraud: the extent of the loss, damage or harm resulting from the offence. This factor should produce a more serious sentence for a higher level of financial crime — but we typically don’t see this when tax fraud and benefit fraud are compared.

I frequently hear that tax fraudsters (or other white-collar offenders) have better legal representation. This is likely to be a factor. However, this leads to the suggestion that greater wealth (potentially achieved from the fraudulent activity) provides the opportunity to buy a preferential outcome from the justice system.

It all comes back to treating people equally. If we want to live in a fair society where people are treated equally, we need our justice system to deliver fair, transparent and equivalent sentences to equivalent crimes.