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Bengaluru: I-T department seizes cash, gold in tax raids on medical labs and two IVF clinic doctors

Indo Asian News Service December 3, 2017, 08:47:56 IST

Income Tax department has seized Rs 1.4 crore in cash and 3.5 kilograms of gold and jewellery during raids conducted on five medical labs and two In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) clinic

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Bengaluru: I-T department seizes cash, gold in tax raids on medical labs and two IVF clinic doctors

Bengaluru: The Income Tax (I-T) department has seized Rs 1.4 crore in cash and 3.5 kilograms of  gold and jewellery during raids conducted on five medical labs and two In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) clinic doctors during the last three days, said a top tax official on Saturday. “The raids on the five medical diagnostic centres and two IVF clinics, doctors in the city also detected secret foreign bank accounts and deposits worth crores of rupees, besides foreign currency,” I-T joint director G Ramesh told IANS. [caption id=“attachment_3477616” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]Representational image. Reuters Representational image. Reuters[/caption] The searches also found that though the labs had declared previously undisclosed income of over Rs 100 crore, the referral fees in the case of a single lab exceeded Rs 200 crore. “We have also found revenue sharing agreements with some doctors by which referral fee is paid in cheques,” said Ramesh in a statement. In few cases, the referral fees paid to doctors in cheques was “disguised” as professional fees, he said. In cases where cash was paid, the payments to the doctors were found to be made on a fortnightly basis, the statement said. “Advance in cash paid to the doctors as an imprest (fund kept as an advance for a particular purpose and periodically restored) from which the actual referral fees payable was found to be adjusted. The advance is again recouped on a fortnightly basis,” it added. The normal commission for doctors in these labs for a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test was found to be 35 percent, and about 20 percent in case of computed tomography (CT) scan and other lab tests, it said. Some of the labs that were raided had employed “commission agents” who would distribute money to doctors in envelopes, Ramesh said. “The agents would insert a chit in these envelopes while giving them to the doctors, that would contain the details of the patient referred by a certain doctor, the doctor’s name, test details and their amounts along with the commission amount to be given to the doctor,” added the statement. The doctors were “very particular” about the amounts to be paid to them and would return the envelopes if they didn’t receive the payments, it added.

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