Kustom Design Group Hosts Ex-CRA Auditor Information Seminar



Senior auditor of the CRA will help attendees better understand interactions with the Canadian Revenue Agency

Calgary, Alberta - The Kustom Design Group of Companies will be holding an information rich seminar presented by Ed Gilmore, a senior auditor in the criminal division of the CRA, at the Coast Plaza Hotel in North East Calgary on October 26 at 7:00 p.m. in efforts to help people understand the CRA’s processes and approach to tax shelters.

“Ed Gilmore has the truth about CRA and Tax Shelters,” said Mike Lepitre, owner of Kustom Design Group of Companies. “He’s not just a promoter of the product selling you a story, he worked with CRA for decades and can share the truth of what is happening behind the scenes at CRA.”

In efforts to help people understand the CRA’s processes, Lepitre said the information session takes an interesting approach and is designed to educate participants on the CRA’s appeal process, tax shelters and more, while exposing what goes on in the CRA and Canada’s tax system.

To attend Kustom Design’s Ex-CRA Auditor Information Seminar an RSVP is required by e-mail at info@kustomdesign.ca, phone (403) 219-0602 or online at http://www.kustomdesign.ca.

About Kustom Design Group
The Kustom Design Strategies Inc. is a self-motivated accounting firm that strives to build lasting relationships of integrity through quality client service and widespread expertise and education.

Media Contact: New Wave Media | http://www.new-wavemedia.com

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Amisha(05.14.2012 21:1:44): it's an interesting story but I come with a dienerfft conclusion. opening tax data to the public has very severe privacy implications, which in my book considerably outweigh the potential benefits of possibly finding a problem. this is also unleashing an army of self-righteous data vigilantes who could attack individuals or organizations with complex, but legal (and moral) tax strategies.however, it's inexcusable that CRA wasn't able to detect fraud of that caliber by themselves. a fraud which was defeated not by exotic statistical analysis, but by just laying down 20 numbers in an excel spreadsheet. How come CRA didn't even try to find where their missing billion dollars went?