CASE REFERENCE
Judgment: Amsterdam Court, Criminal Division
- Date: June 19, 2025
- Case numbers: 81/034780-22 (A) and 81/159304-24 (B)
- ECLI: NL:RBAMS:2025:4117
- Penalty: €10,000 fine (or 85 days in prison)
- Convicted: De facto director of [name BV], born 1957, no fixed residence.
Let’s not sugarcoat it. This case is a cold shower for every entrepreneur in the Netherlands who still thinks that the BV is a shield for nonsense, and that the Belastingdienst is too sleepy to notice creative paperwork. Here's what actually happened and what it means for you.
What Went Down (and Why You Should Care)
This wasn’t some clerical error or a missing receipt. This was orchestration.
A man ran his BV like a personal wallet and a prop agency for mortgage fraud.
- Filed fake VAT returns (2015–2017)
- Didn’t file VAT or corporate tax returns (2016–2021)
- Filed incorrect personal income tax returns, hiding money used for personal dinners in France and Italy
- Created fake salary slips and employment statements to get others mortgage loans they didn’t qualify for
- Used his BV as a theatre stage, where people played employees, but the script was pure fiction.
Let’s repeat one thing loud and clear:
He was the only director. No team. No admin. No one else to blame.
The court called it for what it was: de facto management with fraudulent intent.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
The total tax damage?
€210,808
But due to the man's medical condition and the glacial pace of Dutch justice (4+ years delay), the sentence was reduced to a €10,000 fine.
Think you’d get the same leniency?
Don’t bet your BV on it.
Why This Case Was a Perfect Storm
The man made three fatal miscalculations:
-
He confused ownership with immunity
Owning 100% of a BV doesn’t give you the right to do whatever you want. In fact, it puts you in the crosshairs. The court nailed him not just as a representative, but as the actual executor of the fraud. -
He underestimated the forensic eyes of FIOD & the court
No admin? No invoices? Just bank statements and a blank minute book?
Sorry, but the Dutch tax system expects substance—not smoke and mirrors. -
He used forged documents to defraud banks
Salary slips? Employer statements? All fiction.
Two mortgage loans were secured based on these lies. And if you think banks don’t cross-check, welcome to 2025, where digital trail meets forensic accounting.
Governance Takeaway: The Illusion of the BV Shield
In the Zentriq™ world, this case is the perfect example of a Category 1 Violation:
Breakdown of fiduciary integrity + abuse of legal entity structure.
Let’s decode that in plain language:
You can’t wear the BV like a mask and expect not to be seen.
This man didn’t just fail to comply. He used his company as a fraud engine, blending personal and business finances, skipping returns, and lying to banks.
This isn’t just tax evasion. It’s a full-on collapse of corporate integrity.
For Micro & Small Enterprises: What You Must Learn
This case should trigger immediate risk questions in your head:
- Do you separate your personal and company finances like your life depends on it? (Because it might.)
- Are you fully filing your VAT and corporate returns—or is your accountant just patching holes you pretend not to see?
- Do you review what gets submitted under your name? Or do you "trust the process" without asking what it is?
- Has anyone ever used your company name for loans, subsidies, or letters that you didn't directly supervise?
If any of the answers make you sweat:
Pause. Call your controller. Clean house.
Because once the court sees you as the "de facto manager," the BV is not a wall, it’s a mirror.
Reflection from Xtroverso GRC Desk
This story is not about a mastermind criminal. It’s about lazy governance, self-deception, and the mistaken belief that small businesses can fly under the radar.
They can't.
And they shouldn’t.
At Xtroverso, we say it often and we’ll say it again:
Risk starts where ego replaces responsibility.
Governance isn’t a cost. It’s your parachute.