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Thursday, December 30, 2004

Tennessee To Tax Cocaine…

"among other illegal drugs (via Six Meat Buffet).

The Tennessean - Come the new year, the tax man is coming after drug dealers in Tennessee.

Drug peddlers will be required to pay state excise taxes on illegal substances from marijuana to moonshine, from cocaine to the often illegally obtained prescription painkiller OxyContin under a new law that goes into effect Saturday.

A 10-person tax agency has been created at a one-time cost of $1.2 million to assess the taxes and collect them. The annual cost to enforce the drug tax will be $800,000, said Elizabeth Fitzgerald, spokeswoman for the state Revenue Department.

The tax, however, is expected to more than cover the costs. One estimate by the law's sponsor, Sen. Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, projects collecting $3.6 million in one year.


Odd as this sounds, Tennessee isn't the first state to try this.

Tennessee joins at least 22 other states in taxing illegal drugs. Its law was modeled after North Carolina's, which has collected $83 million in the 14 years it has been on the books, said Laura Lansford, assistant director of that state's Unauthorized Substances Tax Division. Last fiscal year, the drug tax brought in $8.5 million, and $4.9 million since July 1, she said.


So how does it work?


Drug dealers can go to any of the state revenue offices within 48 hours of coming into possession of unauthorized substances. They pay the tax and get a ''stamp'' to put on the drugs showing they have paid up. They would not be required to give their name, address, Social Security number or other identifying information. State tax collectors would be constrained by taxpayer privacy laws from reporting them to police. Still, state officials say voluntary payment is unlikely to happen often.

The most probable way the tax will be collected is when police make drug busts. Law enforcement agencies are required to call tax officials within 48 hours detailing the drugs found.

Tax collectors then assess the tax on the drug suspects, as well as additional fines for not paying the tax in the first place. If the suspects cannot make immediate payment, the state seizes and sells any assets, such as cars, homes and personal belongings, to pay off the liability.

Paying the tax does not immunize a drug dealer from criminal prosecution, nor does nonpayment result in harsher jail sentences or fines, other than a tax penalty. Typical tax penalties are 5% of the unpaid tax liability.

''We consider this a revenue source for law enforcement's fight against narcotics and other illegal substances,'' said Al Laney, Tennessee's director of tax enforcement.


I understand the bit about issuing tax as a way for law enforcement to recoup expenses of arresting and imprisoning drug dealers"but what about the voluntary part? That just seems silly. What kind of drug dealer is going to voluntarily pay taxes on his illegal income? If you're already earning income from selling illegal drugs tax evasion seems like a rather small additional crime.

This all seems backward to me. If we're going to tax the sale of these drugs why not just drop the charade, legalize them and tax them as a legal source of revenue?

Comments

Avatar for Marty

the state seizes and sells any assets, such as cars, homes and personal belongings, to pay off the liability.

And in North Carolina, the snitch who ratted you out gets to keep 25% of the proceeds from the auctioning off your house, cars, and property.  If i were a dishonest fool, instead of an honest one…

I won’t touch your legalization arguments today, but this kind of totalitarianism is immoral.  Every small-town sherrif in the state now has a fully equipped SWAT team, thanks to the proceeds of this law. I suppose they’ll have to decide to deploy them someday, somewhere, for something…

Marty on December 30, 2004 at 04:13 pm
Avatar for Legalize.org » Blog Archive » A surgeo

[...] He’s talking about hard drugs like cocaine and heroin, but it is applicable to pot as well. The war on drugs creates marijuana prices that are artificially high- the harder laws get, the stricter punishments grow, the higher the price becomes. In this scenario, no matter how many dealers you put behind bars, no matter how many users you punish, there’s always somebody willing to take their place because the pay off makes the risk worth it. Until the drug war ends, America will have a drug problem. [...]

Avatar for Six Meat Buffet » 2004 » December

[...] Say Anything bellied up to the buffet [...]

Avatar for drug rehab

Tennessee is one of the 23 states which apply drug tax lows. But the drug problems are not solved. I think that if you can’t own a substance it’s a no sense to be able to buy it if you pay a tax!

drug rehab on November 10, 2007 at 12:54 pm
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