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		<title>2,772 people eligible for &#x27;crack tax&#x27; refunds</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/2772-people-eligible-for-crack-tax-refunds.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: 2,772 people eligible for &#x27;crack tax&#x27; refunds</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/2772-people-eligible-for-crack-tax-refunds.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Tue, 28 Sep 2010 13:19:20 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>2,772 people could be eligible for &#x27;crack tax&#x27; refunds in TN<br /><br />Class-action lawsuit could benefit those who paid drug levy<br /><br />Brian Haas THE TENNESSEAN September 28, 2010<br /><br />When Williamson County Sheriff Ricky Headley was busted for illegal prescription pills, the state taxed him $13,000 on the value of those drugs.<br /><br />Headley paid the tax, resigned as sheriff, pleaded guilty to four drug counts and one count of official misconduct, and got just under five years&#x27; probation.<br /><br />Then, he got his money back. Plus interest.<br /><br />I got every penny back, said his Nashville lawyer, David Raybin.<br /><br />Tennesseans in a slow trickle have requested and gotten refunds from the state since the Tennessee Supreme Court struck down the so-called crack tax law in 2009. The state Department of Revenue has refunded $3.7 million to 161 people, but 2,772 people who paid the tax have not gotten any money back.<br /><br />The law required people who bought or sold illicit drugs to buy a tax stamp for the amount of drugs they had. If they didn&#x27;t, state agents seized their property and raided their bank accounts until the state got whatever amount was owed.<br /><br />Most of them just don&#x27;t know, and the state doesn&#x27;t have any intention of letting them know, that they&#x27;re eligible for a full refund, said Columbia attorney John Colley, who is leading a class-action lawsuit that would allow attorneys to identify and notify all people who paid the tax while it was still on the books.<br /><br />Critics called the law absurd, but it went into effect in 2005.<br /><br />It didn&#x27;t take long for the state to go after drug suspects. Attorneys rattle off horror stories of surprise seizures with revenue agents chasing people down.<br /><br />They&#x27;ve broken children&#x27;s piggy banks. They&#x27;ve taken properties that have been in families for generations, said Knoxville attorney Philip Lomonaco, the attorney who got the law struck down. They&#x27;ve actually chased people down at the courthouse to get gold chains. It&#x27;s ruthless.<br /><br />Though the public may have little sympathy for drug dealers and users, the tax seizures typically came before a suspect was even convicted.<br /><br />The state took $30,000 from one of Lomonaco&#x27;s clients before he was convicted on a marijuana charge, and the man lost his house.<br /><br />The state Supreme Court struck the law down in July 2009 as unconstitutional, saying the legislature overstepped its taxing authority. Basically, drug dealers and users didn&#x27;t fit into the category of merchants or peddlers under state law, so they couldn&#x27;t be taxed.<br /><br />By that time, the state had collected $10.3 million from people. And every person who paid was eligible for a refund.<br /><br />Before the sun set on the Cumberland, I was filing claims, Raybin said. I&#x27;ve been filing claims left and right, and they will give you a refund as long as you fall within certain parameters.<br /><br />If Colley&#x27;s class-action suit is successful before the state Supreme Court, everyone who paid the crack tax will receive a notice that they could be eligible for a refund. If it fails, they&#x27;re on their own, and some who paid the crack tax namely those who paid in 2005 and 2006 won&#x27;t be able to get refunds because the statute of limitations has passed.<br /><br />The Supreme Court has not yet said whether it will hear the case.<br /><br />Legislators in May passed a new version of the crack tax. The new law, which took effect July 1, targets only cases that involve drugs worth $10,000 or more.<br /><br />It also redefines drug dealers to be considered merchants, like any other business in the state, and therefore taxable.<br /><br />We really didn&#x27;t define what a dealer was, said state Rep. Charles Curtiss, D-Sparta, who helped sponsor the original and the new crack tax legislation. We were making an assumption when we caught someone with X amount of marijuana or X amount of drugs that they were selling it.<br /><br />Curtiss said the new law was drafted with input from the Tennessee attorney general&#x27;s office to make it more resistant to challenges.<br /><br />So far, nobody has been assessed the new tax. But attorneys are predicting a similar outcome the second time around once the tax agents come knocking.<br /><br />I don&#x27;t think there&#x27;s any way to make this kind of law constitutional, Colley said.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/2772-people-eligible-for-crack-tax-refunds.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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