Man serves sentence for drug distribution...then finds out he owes the state $47 mil

sweethome

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This is pretty interesting. If it has already been mentioned, please close this thread.
http://www.wwl.com/pages/4184561.php

Lawsuit aimed at 'drug stamp' law
Associated Press Reporting

A convicted drug dealer is challenging a state law that requires the purchase of "drug stamps" as a means of paying taxes on controlled substances after being told he owes the Louisiana Department of Revenue more than $47 million.
Todd Matherne, 28, says in a state district court lawsuit that he only learned about the tax when he tried to get a house loan after serving his time following a 2006 guilty plea.
It was then that he was told the revenue department had a $47 million tax lien against him.
The 1990 law is one of about 20 drug stamp laws in the nation, according to the Web site of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
Such laws effectively provide opportunities to charge drug dealers for evading taxes and are sometimes called "Al Capone" laws, after the Prohibition-era gangster who was finally tripped up on federal income tax evasion charges and sent to prison.
Matherne was one of three people arrested in Houma in 2005 in connection with a ring that state police said sold steroids and impotence drugs by mail. A state police news release at the time described an operation that sold counterfeit versions of at least seven brand-name drugs. Hundreds of bottles of liquid steroids were confiscated.
Matherne said in his lawsuit that he pleaded guilty to six drug charges and was sentenced to prison but not fined.
"At no time did anyone tell Todd Matherne that he owed forty-seven million dollars to the state of Louisiana when he entered into the plea agreement," the lawsuit, dated March 30, said.
Such a large assessment would effectively deny Matherne any "any semblance of a normal life," the lawsuit said. It amounts to "an excessive fine resulting in outlandish debt" and "qualifies as cruel and unusual punishment" forbidden by the Constitution.
According to the tax stamp law, each gram of marijuana is taxed at a rate of $3.50. Other drugs are assessed at $200 per gram if sold by weight or $400 per 10 dosage units. Anyone who fails to purchase the stamps can be made to pay twice the amount of tax owed.
Similar laws in other state courts have been challenged with varying degrees of success. Louisiana's law deals specifically with some of the issues raised in various court challenges. It includes, for instance, provisions designed to protect dealers from self-incrimination by purchasing the stamps.
Figures on how much Louisiana has collected under the drug stamp law were not available when the department was contacted Thursday by The Associated Press. State officials have declined comment on the lawsuit.
The Terrebonne Parish Sheriff's Office is also a defendant in the suit.
"This is a total frivolous suit," Bill Dodd, the Houma attorney who represents the sheriff's office told The (Houma) Courier newspaper.
 
I can see how this could amount to cruel and unusual punishment. Well, no I can't. The constitution says cruel and unusual punishment, not "or" and given the ultra-literal interpretation being pushed by conservatives, I can easily see this not being considered cruel and unusual. It's not realy cruel.

If the government seized his assets though, he should have been considered to have paid this.

$200/g or $400/10 doses is ridiculous.

Interesting that marijuana is 57 times cheaper than any other drug. That's a tacit acknowledgement that marijuana sale isn't all that bad. Cigarettes are taxed higher than that (in terms of doses you can get out of a gram vs. a pack of cigarettes; or at least for me. I can make a gram last me a month).
 
Such laws do not deserve to be named as such.
If the government taxes something, it legitimizes its trade. You can't have it both ways. How the Supreme Court hasn't declared this yet is beyond me.

Someone should arrest whoever runs the revenue collection on such drug-tax operations. Profiting off the illegal drug trade is still against the law.
 
The only way to pay that off is to become a big time drug dealer or drug smuggler. Is that what the state wants? This war on drugs is the most destructive thing that has ever happened to America. Is it only people without common sense who are elected to public office?
 
These stamp laws have been around for years, and I have not even spent a second trying to rationalize them. What makes things worse is this is a Louisiana tax case - the absolute most convoluted tax laws exist there. Everything that is pretty much normal everywhere else is a big can of worms over there thanks to a bunch of Napoleonic BS it was founded on that doesn't have any place in an allegedly civilized country. Overhauling it would cost too much, and Louisiana doesn't really have a large bank account or an impressive economy either (as is evidenced by both this beg for $47 million dollars and the fact that the US basically let that place get destroyed (hurricane) with minimal intervention due to the low return it would yield).

I have inside information on the Louisiana tax debacle because my uncle, who is rich as god, chooses Louisiana as his state of operation because the prosecutors don't even know how to interpret the law effectively. They are underpaid and they are back-logged to the moon thanks to Napoleonic tax laws which still, unbelievably, exist in that state. Speaking of which, the state of Louisiana itself is so non-functional in every way that they shoot for the moon whenever they think they caught a big fish because they desperately need some money... any money will do!. It's a complete bluff in tax cases like this. The hot-shot, old school Louisiana tax attorneys who are 50-60 years old will take this case on contingency because they know how disorganized, contrived, and in many cases just plain contradictory the tax laws are.
 
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"At no time did anyone tell Todd Matherne that he owed forty-seven million dollars to the state of Louisiana when he entered into the plea agreement,
"GAME OVER!" By definition. Seriously, thats waking up one day & getting kicked in the balls on so many levels.
 
Those "taxes" are ridiculous, they should be called "penalties" or probably more appropriately "ass rapings", how is it a tax? That is more than they are getting for that amount of drug let alone profit, it makes no sense and is such a joke. How do they expect the man to pay that off? What better way to lead him back into a life of crime dealing in off the books revenue than slapping him with a 47 million dollar fine?
 
Those "taxes" are ridiculous, they should be called "penalties" or probably more appropriately "ass rapings", how is it a tax?
hah that was great & i agree.
How do they expect the man to pay that off?
they expect him to never pay that full amount back.. our court system is a nazi dinosaur though.
 
i want to buy one of these stamps to put on my wall but i dont want my name on some gov't list :(
 
If a commodity is illegal and folk are liable to incarceration for selling it then how on earth can the state claim taxes on it?
 
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