BRUSSELS: The EU on Tuesday announced the discovery of a sophisticated 2.2-billion-euro ($2.3-billion) VAT tax fraud that triggered raids in 14 countries, including France, Germany, Greece and Spain.

More than 600 people participated in the scheme, “believed to be the biggest VAT carousel fraud ever investigated in the EU,” according to the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO).

Prosecutors uncovered a network of “criminal activities” operating in almost all 27 EU member states and beyond in Albania, Britain, China, Mauritius, Serbia, Singapore, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. The probe was launched 18 months ago, when the EPPO was called in to help authorities in Portugal look into what initially appeared to be a small case.

This involved a company located in the medieval Portuguese city of Coimbra selling mobile phones and other electronic devices which was suspected of shirking its payments of value-added tax (VAT).

While a paperwork audit appeared to be in order, the EPPO, backed by Europol and national law enforcement agencies, probed further — and discovered a sprawling, massive fraud scheme.

“Several highly skilled organised crime groups” were involved, “each of which has specific roles in the overall scheme,” the EPPO said.

It stressed the “extraordinary complexity of the chain of companies”, adding that some 9,000 were identified.

Many appeared on the outside to be ordinary suppliers of electronic devices and claimed VAT reimbursements, while others, selling online, funnelled revenues offshore before disappearing.

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