Greenwood2
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Post by Greenwood2 on Jul 11, 2023 20:51:18 GMT
I can't really compare Brits with another others in the ' northern european' area , except possibly Norwegians, for 'sheer pigheaded bloody mindedness'. It was pretty obvious the the 96 year old need to be banged up to comply. They'd probably let him out for 'health reasons' pretty quickly. Or he will be in an open prison pottering around the grounds or in a prison hospital. I don't know what his previous living conditions were, but he may well be more comfortable and well looked after in prison, rather than fending for himself outside.
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Post by martin44 on Jul 11, 2023 20:53:06 GMT
A reporter on gbnews stated, the person in question is a male on over 400k a year... hes a prominent BBC 6pm and 10pm news reporter... so... Hugh actually is it... its not linekar.. he said so... its not .... bla bla bla... .. we know who it is.
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Post by martin44 on Jul 11, 2023 20:55:12 GMT
I don't believe it is, but unless you can be more specific about what you think is wrong, I'm at a loss to know how I can help. The rules seem pretty clear to all other posters and in the link provided by yourself. look back... "no longer continues to live in it" .... yes they can.
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Post by Ace on Jul 11, 2023 21:12:34 GMT
I don't believe it is, but unless you can be more specific about what you think is wrong, I'm at a loss to know how I can help. The rules seem pretty clear to all other posters and in the link provided by yourself. look back... "no longer continues to live in it" .... yes they can. Yes, so long as they pay full market rent for doing so.
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Post by martin44 on Jul 11, 2023 21:17:37 GMT
look back... "no longer continues to live in it" .... yes they can. Yes, so long as they pay full market rent for doing so. no they dont have to pay full market rent... in fact they dont have to pay any rent. look it up.
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Post by Ace on Jul 11, 2023 21:18:51 GMT
Yes, so long as they pay full market rent for doing so. no they dont have to pay full market rent... in fact they dont have to pay any rent. look it up. I did. They do. Goodnight.
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ilmoro
Member of DD Central
'Wondering which of the bu***rs to blame, and watching for pigs on the wing.' - Pink Floyd
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Post by ilmoro on Jul 11, 2023 21:38:05 GMT
Yes, so long as they pay full market rent for doing so. no they dont have to pay full market rent... in fact they dont have to pay any rent. look it up. Try this www.gov.uk/guidance/work-out-inheritance-tax-due-on-gifts#gifts-with-reservationGifts with reservation If the person who died gave a gift and used it in the 7 years before they died, it is seen as a ‘gift with reservation of benefit’. It is not an outright gift and is not exempt. As an example, someone could transfer ownership of their house to a relative and continue to live in it without paying rent at the going rate. If they continued to use the gift in the 7 years before they died, it counts as part of their estate. It does not matter when they gave it. It is taxed at the market value at the time of their death as if they still owned it.
If they paid rent at the market rate when they gave away their property, they would not have retained a benefit.
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agent69
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Post by agent69 on Jul 12, 2023 17:17:14 GMT
Hugh Edwards finally named as the BBC presenter in the current sex scandal. Got his wife to make the statement, given he is in hospital with a serious mental health issue.
I wonder if he has been taking lessons from Ernest Saunders?
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jul 12, 2023 17:21:25 GMT
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agent69
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Post by agent69 on Jul 12, 2023 17:32:10 GMT
So just coincidence that he went into hospital just as the story was breaking?
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jul 12, 2023 18:05:30 GMT
So just coincidence that he went into hospital just as the story was breaking? Unlikely. If you're just about clinging on, something like that is definitely going to tip you over, don't you think? (Certainly to a crisis point, possibly to the point of a suicide attempt...?)
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Post by martin44 on Jul 12, 2023 19:04:17 GMT
no they dont have to pay full market rent... in fact they dont have to pay any rent. look it up. Try this www.gov.uk/guidance/work-out-inheritance-tax-due-on-gifts#gifts-with-reservationGifts with reservation If the person who died gave a gift and used it in the 7 years before they died, it is seen as a ‘gift with reservation of benefit’. It is not an outright gift and is not exempt. As an example, someone could transfer ownership of their house to a relative and continue to live in it without paying rent at the going rate. If they continued to use the gift in the 7 years before they died, it counts as part of their estate. It does not matter when they gave it. It is taxed at the market value at the time of their death as if they still owned it.
If they paid rent at the market rate when they gave away their property, they would not have retained a benefit.and after 7 years? fed up of repeating myself to people who dont read.
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ilmoro
Member of DD Central
'Wondering which of the bu***rs to blame, and watching for pigs on the wing.' - Pink Floyd
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Post by ilmoro on Jul 12, 2023 19:24:56 GMT
Try this www.gov.uk/guidance/work-out-inheritance-tax-due-on-gifts#gifts-with-reservationGifts with reservation If the person who died gave a gift and used it in the 7 years before they died, it is seen as a ‘gift with reservation of benefit’. It is not an outright gift and is not exempt. As an example, someone could transfer ownership of their house to a relative and continue to live in it without paying rent at the going rate. If they continued to use the gift in the 7 years before they died, it counts as part of their estate. It does not matter when they gave it. It is taxed at the market value at the time of their death as if they still owned it.
If they paid rent at the market rate when they gave away their property, they would not have retained a benefit.and after 7 years? fed up of repeating myself to people who dont read. They are dead!!!! Ceased to be! 'expired and gone to meet their maker! 'a stiff! Bereft of life, they rests in peace! pushing up the daisies! metabolic processes are now 'istory! kicked the bucket, shuffled off the mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisible!!
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Post by Ace on Jul 12, 2023 19:31:04 GMT
Try this www.gov.uk/guidance/work-out-inheritance-tax-due-on-gifts#gifts-with-reservationGifts with reservation If the person who died gave a gift and used it in the 7 years before they died, it is seen as a ‘gift with reservation of benefit’. It is not an outright gift and is not exempt. As an example, someone could transfer ownership of their house to a relative and continue to live in it without paying rent at the going rate. If they continued to use the gift in the 7 years before they died, it counts as part of their estate. It does not matter when they gave it. It is taxed at the market value at the time of their death as if they still owned it.
If they paid rent at the market rate when they gave away their property, they would not have retained a benefit.and after 7 years? fed up of repeating myself to people who dont read. Not half as fed up as we are. Perhaps you should try understanding instead of just reading!
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ilmoro
Member of DD Central
'Wondering which of the bu***rs to blame, and watching for pigs on the wing.' - Pink Floyd
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Post by ilmoro on Jul 12, 2023 19:41:21 GMT
Are you talking about an entirely scenario different to the one we began talking about?
Gift the house, pay full rent for 7 years then stop but dont die.
Trying to think outside the box here because none of your posts have said as such
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