Police can seize £2m from Andrew Tate for unpaid taxes: UK court

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Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan are escorted outside the Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) in Bucharest in this file photo from August 21. — Reuters
Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan are escorted outside the Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) in Bucharest in this file photo from August 21. — Reuters

UK police on Wednesday won a legal bid to seize more than £2 million ($2.5 million) from controversial influencer Andrew Tate and his brother to settle millions due in unpaid taxes.

A London court ruled in favour of police who had applied to seize the money from seven frozen bank accounts in a civil fraud case against the brothers.

The two men remain in Romania and Wednesday’s ruling came before a hearing due in Bucharest on Thursday to decide whether Tate, 38, a former professional kickboxer, and his brother, Tristan, 36, can be tried on allegations of human trafficking and rape.

In the civil case at Westminster Magistrates Court, police told the hearing the siblings had failed to pay any taxes on £21m of revenue from their online businesses.

The case was lodged against them and a third person — referred to only as “J” — by Devon and Cornwall police in southwest England over allegedly unpaid tax from earnings between 2014 and 2022.

In his judgment, Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring said what appeared to be a “complex financial matrix” was actually a “straightforward cheat” of UK tax authorities.

At an earlier hearing, lawyer Sarah Clarke, representing the police force, quoted from a video posted online by Andrew Tate in which he said: “When I lived in England I refused to pay tax.” The court was told that he said his plan was to “ignore, ignore, ignore because, in the end, they go away”.

Clarke claimed the brothers had “a huge number of bank accounts” in the UK — seven of which are now frozen — and that money “washed around” them. “That’s what tax evasion looks like, that’s what money laundering looks like,” she said.

The money came from products they sold online as well as their OnlyFans subscription sites, the court was told.

‘This is not justice’

Reacting on X, Tate, a US-born Briton, attacked authorities for pursuing him through the courts. “First, they labelled me a human trafficker, yet they couldn’t find a single woman to stand against me,” he said.

“When that narrative crumbled, they turned to outright theft — freezing my accounts for over two years and now seizing everything they could. This is not justice; it’s a coordinated attack on anyone who dares to challenge the system,” he added.

Andrew Tate moved to Romania years ago after first starting a webcam business in the UK.

He later turned to social media platforms to promote his divisive views. Giving tips on how to be successful, along with misogynistic and sometimes violent maxims, his videos have made him one of the world’s best-known influencers.

Romanian prosecutors allege that Tate and his brother and two women set up a criminal organisation and sexually exploited several victims.

But last month after the men appealed the charges, the Bucharest appeals court ordered Romanian prosecutors “to rectify the irregularities of the indictment and to specify, within five days, whether it maintains the decision to send the defendants to trial”.

In a separate case, a Romanian court in August placed Andrew Tate under house arrest, and his brother Tristan under judicial control over a new investigation involving minors.

Prosecutors are investigating “crimes of forming an organised criminal group, trafficking in minors”, “sexual relations with a minor” and “money laundering”. The Tates also face rape and assault allegations in separate cases in Britain.

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