A popular offshore tax haven is in crisis after its premier is arrested in a Miami drug bust

With no corporate taxes, murky disclosure rules, and close connections to the U.K., the British Virgin Islands were a popular destination for wealthy individuals and international companies wanting to minimize their tax burden. But now the arrest of the Islands' leader in Miami threatens to upend how the popular tax haven operates.

On April 28, U.S. officials arrested BVI Premier Andrew Fahie in a Miami airport. The U.S. accused Fahie of offering a drug smuggler—who turned out to be an informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration—use of the BVI island of Tortola as a waypoint for U.S.-bound cocaine. Fahie has pled not guilty.

On Thursday, the local legislature ousted Fahie in a vote of no confidence, replacing him with Deputy Premier Natalio Wheatley, who served as acting premier after the arrest.

Fahie's arrest was a political crisis for the BVI, “home” to about 400,000 companies with registered offices in the tiny territory.

But then it got worse.

After news of Fahie's arrest broke, a commission established by BVI British governor John Rankin to investigate unrelated claims of corruption released its findings ahead of schedule.

The report slammed the conduct of the local government, which Fahie led. Rankin said that the report concluded that “almost everywhere the principles of good governance such as openness, transparency, and the rule of law are ignored…it is highly likely that serious dishonesty may have taken place across a broad range of government.”

The report reached a bombshell conclusion: that the U.K. government should suspend the BVI’s constitution, dissolve local government, and impose direct rule for at least two years. Rankin said the measures are necessary to “protect [the people of the BVI] from such abuses and assist them to achieve their aspirations for self-government.”

Wheatley criticized the recommendation, saying that “direct rule would undermine all the progress that our people have made over generations.” Fellow Caribbean governments also blasted the suggestion, with the Organization of East Caribbean States calling the possibility of direct U.K. rule “a retrograde step in the evolution of the democratic process.”

Tax havens

The crisis is not just unwelcome news to the 30,600 residents of the British Virgin Islands, but also to the hundreds of thousands of companies—including subsidiaries of major global companies—registered in the British territory.

Registering a company in the British Virgin Islands is a common practice among companies and individuals looking to minimize their tax burden. The BVI has a 0% corporate tax rate, and does not require BVI-registered companies to publicly disclose their directors or shareholders.