The @USAccidental group in France losea first round – but they will fight on: "« Américains accidentels » : déboutée en France, l'association va saisir l'Europe" https://t.co/9f2BgHxyyI via @cbanque
— U.S. Citizen Abroad (@USCitizenAbroad) July 20, 2019
The above tweet references an article in French describing the decision in France in which the Court declined to provide relief to Accidental Americans AKA citizen/residents of France. Implicit in the court’s decision is the notion that those “Born In The USA” (as Bruce would sing) are property of the United States. What follows is an attempt to translate the article (using Google Translate).
The Council of State rejected Friday the appeal initiated by the Association of “accidental Americans”, gathering French born on the American soil, opposed to the application in France of a tax regulation American of which they consider themselves victims: Fatca.
Learn more at https://www.cbanque.com/actu/75081/americains-accidentels-deboutee-en-france-association-va-saisir-europe#vJCYvsOX2rjp0YbU.99
Adopted by Washington in 2010, and applied in France since 2014, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (Fatca) allows the US tax authorities to ask foreign banks for information on their customers considered as “American people”. This application was challenged by accidental Americans, these French having a dual nationality because of their birth on the American soil, and today faced with administrative hassles and banking problems.
No defect of execution
In its decision, consulted by AFP, the highest French administrative court found unfounded the request of accidental Americans, considering that the regulatory acts taken for the implementation of this agreement were not without a legal basis. The Conseil d’Etat thus followed the conclusions of the public rapporteur, who had estimated at a hearing in early July that the Fatca did not present a “proven” lack of performance but at most “technical difficulties of implementation.
“Such an assessment is, however, directly contradicted by various parliamentary reports, as well as by the Court of Auditors,” which lamented in 2017 that the United States had sent “no information” to the French tax authorities, the Association reacted. accidental Americans. The association “deeply regrets that its legal critics have not been heard by the Council of State and deplores an opportunity of resistance failed in the extraterritoriality of US law,” she added in a statement.
In addition to the lack of reciprocity in the implementation of the agreement, the lawyer accidental Americans, Me Patrice Spinosi, had invoked to challenge the application of FATCA “the lack of guarantees on the protection of personal data.” A point also contested by the Council of State, for whom “the information collected and transferred as part of the disputed treatment can be used only for tax purposes” and are otherwise “strictly limited and proportionate”.
Complaint to the European Commission
In its statement, the Association of Accidental Americans announced that it would “seize the European Commission of a complaint for breach of EU law,” regretting that the Council of State refused to question the Court of the European Union to decide this question.
Since the coming into force of the Fatca, some “accidental Americans” have been claimed several thousand euros in taxes by the United States without having ever worked in this country. Others saw their bank account closed, their bank fearing US sanctions. Still others are exposed to lawsuits because they can not submit their US tax identification number, which they do not have.
Complaint to the European Commission
In its statement, the Association of Accidental Americans announced that it would “seize the European Commission of a complaint for breach of EU law,” regretting that the Council of State refused to question the Court of the European Union to decide this question.