Yang, Lao, firms linked to Pharmally didn’t file ITRs for several years — Drilon
MANILA, Philippines — Chinese businessman Michael Yang, former procurement chief Lloyd Christopher Lao, and the companies who have been dragged in the Pharmally Pharmaceutical Corp. issue have not filed their income tax returns (ITR) for several years, documents presented by Senator Franklin Drilon showed.
During the Senate blue ribbon committee hearing on Thursday, Drilon presented various documents, including a certification from the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) saying that Yang, who provided financial assistance to Pharmally in supplying the government with pandemic supplies, did not submit ITRs.
“Mr. Michael Yang, interesting. The income tax returns for taxable years 2017 and prior years were not filed. No income tax return filed, based on the verification made by the District’s Collection Section, and the income tax returns for 2014 to 2017 could not be found in the records of the BIR,” Drilon said.
“In 2018, the taxable income of Mr. Yang was at P208,000 and the taxes paid in 2018 was P7,600. In 2019 and 2020, we’re sorry but the records are not readable,” he added.
Yang is the former economic adviser of President Rodrigo Duterte.
Article continues after this advertisementDrilon also showed documents and another BIR certification that Lao, who was head of the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM) when the government procured from Pharmally, had no taxable income in 2017 and did not file the ITR in 2020.
Article continues after this advertisement“In 2017, he did not earn any taxable income and therefore paid zero taxes. In 2018, the income tax returns were filed through the e-BIR forms online facility, but these could not be viewed by the BIR. In 2020, he did not file an income tax return,” Drilon said.
Aside from Yang and Lao, ITRs of Pharmally officials and siblings Mohit and Twinkle Dargani were also presented by Drilon. For Mohit, there was no information from the BIR on his ITRs for 2018, while he paid taxes amounting to P22,062 and P97,241 in 2019 and 2002, respectively.
However, the taxable income declared by Mohit in 2019 and 2020 were unreadable.
In the case of Twinkle, she paid taxes worth P29,187 in 2018 and P1,000 in 2020. Similar to his brother, the taxable income was also unreadable for both 2018 and 2020.
In 2019, there was no information from the BIR about Twinkle’s tax records.
Pharmally president Huang Tzu Yen, on the other hand, has no records with BIR from 2019 up to the present. As for Pharmally — the company, it has a tax credit of P96.08 million.
Other companies which supplied face masks and face shields, and other medical equipment to Pharmally like Greentrends Trading International Inc. and Xuzhou Constructions Machinery Group, did not file any ITRs for several years.
Greentrends, Drilon said, did not file their ITR from 2015 to 2021, while Xuzhou had no tax records from 2017 to the present.
Pharmally remains at the center of the Senate’s investigation on the Commission on Audit (COA) report, which showed deficiencies in the Department of Health (DOH) COVID-19 funds amounting to P67.32 billion.
Part of that P67.32 billion is the P42 billion funds transferred by DOH to PS-DBM, which then granted contracts worth P8.7 billion to Pharmally despite it having a small paid-up capital of P625,000.
There are also accusations that Pharmally’s equipment was overpriced, like in the case of face masks sold at over P27 per piece in April 2020, when other companies offered a price of P13 per piece.