The Briefing
- Police uncovered a major payroll tax fraud
- Fake invoices hid three million euros in liabilities
- Over twenty suspects face serious financial crime charges
Helsinki police have completed a two-year investigation into a vast network of shadow economy crimes in Southern Finland.
A local staffing and construction company is suspected of using shell companies to pay undeclared wages between 2019 and 2021. Authorities estimate the criminal benefit at roughly three million euros in unpaid taxes and statutory fees.
The criminal case involves more than twenty suspects and centers on aggravated tax fraud and accounting offenses. Investigators also suspect aggravated earnings-related pension fraud.
In Finland, employers are legally required to pay pension contributions, known as TyEL, for all employees. Bypassing these payments denies workers their future social security benefits and fractures the Finnish welfare system.
Police believe the main company routed its payroll funds through nearly ten related shell companies. They used fake subcontracting invoices to disguise the money trail.
The suspects allegedly used frontmen to hide the actual individuals responsible for the businesses.
According to lead investigator Markus Metsänen, the artificial arrangement was designed to evade statutory tax and payment obligations.
Metsänen stated that the avoided taxes and pension contributions total approximately three million euros. He added that the workers who received undeclared wages now face significant unassessed personal income tax liabilities.
This means the workers themselves are also under investigation. The Finnish Tax Administration strictly monitors undeclared income, and police have looked into more than twenty individual employees for aggravated tax fraud related to their unpaid personal taxes.
The suspects allegedly used frontmen to hide the actual individuals responsible for the businesses.
The shadow economy remains a recognized challenge in the Finnish construction and staffing industries. Authorities frequently monitor these sectors to protect both state revenue and vulnerable foreign labor.
A key feature of this specific crime was the extensive use of foreign banking services and accounts. Finnish police had to make several international legal assistance requests to trace the funds across borders.
The investigation protocols regarding the companies will move to the prosecutor for consideration this April.
The separate investigations concerning the individual workers were already handed over to the prosecutor late last year.

