Rockwell Olivier hires Morris Maroon as head of tax

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Rockwell Olivier hires Morris Maroon as head of tax

Morris Maroon has joined Rockwell Olivier as head of tax. He will work from the Sydney office, leading a team that advises businesses and professional advisers on all areas of Australian domestic and international tax law and also assists clients and accountants to resolve complex disputes with the Australian Tax Office (ATO).

Maroon has more than 25 years of experience in corporate and international tax in Australia.

He was director of tax for Altus Financial between June 2013 and January 2014. Before that, he worked for EY for more than 15 years. and at KPMG for seven and a half.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Elsewhere, the UAE’s tax office has issued an update on registration penalties and two firms have been busy making lateral hires
The case sits within a context of Brazil signalling that it is replacing informal discretion and ambiguity with structures that reward analytical rigour, one expert tells ITR
Jeff Soar lifts the lid on WTS UK’s ambitious recruitment plans, the firm's positioning against the big four, and why tax is the perfect profession for AI
The move reinforces Milan’s role as a key European hub for international business, the firm said
Australia’s government has also announced that it will implement the pillar two side-by-side agreement
Sara Morgan is due to join Joseph Hage Aaronson & Bremen as a partner in London, ITR understands
The newly combined tax team has already worked on thousands of joint client matters, leaders from McDermott Will & Schulte tell ITR
As AI becomes increasingly intuitive and idiot-proof, its tax applicability is becoming impossible to overstate
New data on public CbCR showed uneven adoption, as Singapore advanced pillar two compliance and firms expanded their tax capabilities
Nearly two years after its publication, the Corporate Tax Roadmap is reshaping the UK’s TP framework through incremental reforms focused on scope, transparency and earlier HMRC intervention
Gift this article