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How to get PayPal statements from 2018 - 2020 from PayPal if account got closed - for tax office?

JohnLocke

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Dec 29, 2008
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For documentation of transactions that include payments to one of our PayPal accounts, we need to have account statements. The tax authorities will not accept it if we do not present them when they are to be recorded as income in our company from that time.

I have tried writing and calling PayPal over the last six months, but nothing has been done; they are completely unresponsive to such inquiries. What does one do in such a situation?

It should be noted that even though we have statements from several months (not entire year) of the years in question, the tax authorities still refuse to accept that they are true and claim they are fictitious.
 
Thank you, I will try that. It is a case from the past, as you can see, and the tax authorities have gone completely mad. They have fabricated stories and denied the legitimacy of an entire business even though it has paid taxes and VAT and had audited financial statements. They are insane.
 
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It's Denmark! Now I will try what @JohnnyDoe suggested, and if it doesn't help, then I will have to get a lawyer to write a letter to PayPal's Danish department.
 
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It's Denmark! Now I will try what @JohnnyDoe suggested, and if it doesn't help, then I will have to get a lawyer to write a letter to PayPal's Danish department.
I thought it was a common law jurisdiction.
I don’t know the Danish system, but I guess it’s like all the other EU civil law systems, based on the principle that you are guilty and a liar until proven otherwise.
Therefore, they will tell you that it is your duty to keep proper accounting and adequate supporting documentation, not PayPal’s fault not to respond. With a honest affidavit you risk admitting your wrongdoing.
It might be better to ignore them and let them chase you if they want - assuming you are now far away from Denmark.
 
I am far away from those scoundrels, but there is a former partner who has gotten into trouble, and Skat (Danish Tax Authority) knows about it, hence they have pursued the case. And you are absolutely right, as I have described before, it is us who must prove that we are right, and it is us who must obtain the information from PayPal. Until then, the Danish Tax Authorities have concocted a false story claiming that no company ever existed and it's all personal fortune which has been transferred to my partner as "disguised dividends."

A lot of money has already been spent on lawyers and accountants, not to mention time. I will pursue this case because it is a vile treatment that the tax has given us, and the fact that an authority can just fabricate lies is disastrous for a democratic society.
 
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I will pursue this case because it is a vile treatment that the tax has given us, and the fact that an authority can just fabricate lies is disastrous for a democratic society.
I agree in principle, but unfortunately even if you win (and it will be a Phyrric victory) this will have zero practical impact on the authority.
Giving them the silence treatment is the best form of resistance.
 
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I agree in principle, but unfortunately even if you win (and it will be a Phyrric victory) this will have zero practical impact on the authority.
Giving them the silence treatment is the best form of resistance.
It is not because I think the tax authorities will change anything, on the contrary, they have been trained to fabricate fictitious stories and lie as much as they can to win a case at any cost.

But the problem is that if we don't get it under control, they will have ruined my partner's life forever, and I refuse to be part of that. They are completely indifferent to the human aspect of the Danish tax system, everyone is just a number like the ones used for cattle, and then it's just a number you turn on or off. And they call this a socialist state - I almost fall over laughing when I see them on TV.
 
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It is not because I think the tax authorities will change anything, on the contrary, they have been trained to fabricate fictitious stories and lie as much as they can to win a case at any cost.

But the problem is that if we don't get it under control, they will have ruined my partner's life forever, and I refuse to be part of that. They are completely indifferent to the human aspect of the Danish tax system, everyone is just a number like the ones used for cattle, and then it's just a number you turn on or off. And they call this a socialist state - I almost fall over laughing when I see them on TV.
Isn’t possible to allocate the lawyers budget (which can be huge) to an escape plan for your partner? Does she really want to keep living in that hell?
 
Isn’t possible to allocate the lawyers budget (which can be huge) to an escape plan for your partner? Does she really want to keep living in that hell?
Sadly not, it's complicated as hell. God knows I'm trying to make this puzzle fit together.
 
Sometimes it’s better to go straight to court instead of trying to reason with the tax authority, if you are lucky you will find a good judge. Your lawyers might also be able to buy time with some procedural matters, and you could use that time to build an escape plan.
 
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Are you BrezelBob?

As far as I understand is PayPal regulated in Luxemburg and they are by law required to keep bank account statements for up to 10 years. I personally would try to reach out to them by phone and if necessary with a lawyer. I sent you the contact I had at PayPal in a PM, not sure if it helps, but maybe worth a call.

You may even try the GDPR route, which in many cases is a very effective way to get access to such data.
 
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