Italian prosecutors on Wednesday said they are seeking to have a tax evasion investigation against Google dropped after the tech giant agreed to pay a 326 million euro ($340 million) settlement. Milan prosecutors had opened an investigation against Google for failure to pay taxes on earnings in Italy from 2015-2019.
Sema Karaman had climbed the Big Tech corporate ladder but hadn't had a real vacation in over five years. A week in Italy changed everything.
Italian prosecutors said Wednesday they will seek to drop a tax evasion investigation against Google after the tech giant agreed to pay a 326 million euro ($340 million) settlement.
Italian prosecutors on Wednesday said they are seeking to have a tax evasion investigation against Google dropped after the tech giant agreed to pay a 326 million euro ($340 million) settlement. Milan prosecutors had opened an investigation against Google for failure to pay taxes on earnings in Italy from 2015-2019.
Italian prosecutors plan to drop an investigation opened against Google for allegedly failing to pay taxes on earnings in Italy between 2015 and 2019 after the tech giant agreed to pay a €326 million (about $340 million) settlement.
Tech giant Google has paid 326 million euros to Italy following an investigation into alleged unpaid taxes, Milan prosecutors said Wednesday, as they recommended criminal proceedings be dropped.
However, Google has agreed to pay $340 million to settle an ongoing tax case against the company. Google has agreed to pay €326 million (approximately $340 million) to settle a tax dispute with Italian authorities.
A Google spokesperson said the company reached a settlement with Italian authorities that puts an end to a tax dispute for the period between 2015 and 2019 without litigation. The spokesperson declined to elaborate on the settlement.
MILAN (Reuters) -Milan prosecutors plan to drop a case brought against the European division of Google after the company agreed to pay 326 million euros ($340 million) to settle a tax claim, they said on Wednesday.
Google has agreed to a $340 million (€326 million) settlement to resolve an Italian tax dispute. Consequently, Milan
Milan prosecutors plan to drop a case brough against Google’s European division after the company agreed to pay $340M to settle a tax claim,
Italian prosecutors said Wednesday they will seek to drop a tax evasion investigation against Google after the tech giant agreed to pay a 326 million euro ($340 million) settlement.Milan prosecutors had opened an investigation against Google for failure to pay taxes on earnings in Italy from 2015-2019.