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Marijuana activists sue to halt Colorado pot tax collections

Tudo

Troublemaker
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<CITE id=yui_3_16_0_1_1402458725582_1207 class="byline vcard top-line">By By Keith Coffman <ABBR id=yui_3_16_0_1_1402458725582_1228>2 hours ago</ABBR></CITE>

<!-- google_ad_section_start --><META content=2014-06-11T01:20:23Z itemprop="datePublished"><META content="Marijuana activists sue to halt Colorado pot tax collections" itemprop="headline"><META content="" itemprop="alternativeHeadline"><META content="" itemprop="image"><META content="By Keith Coffman DENVER (Reuters) - A group of marijuana activists in Colorado are suing to prevent the government collecting taxes derived from the state’s legal pot industry, saying it violates the right against self-incrimination guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. The lawsuit, filed by local lawyer Rob Corry this week in Denver District Court, asks that a judge issue an injunction ordering the state and city of Denver to halt the practice. Voters in Colorado and Washington state approved the legalization of recreational pot use by adults in 2012 ballot measures. Both are among nearly two dozen states and the District of Columbia that allow the use of medical marijuana, although cannabis remains illegal for any purpose under federal law." itemprop="description">By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - A group of marijuana activists in Colorado are suing to prevent the government collecting taxes derived from the state’s legal pot industry, saying it violates the right against self-incrimination guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution.
The lawsuit, filed by local lawyer Rob Corry this week in Denver District Court, asks that a judge issue an injunction ordering the state and city of Denver to halt the practice.
Corry, who also represents businesses in the marijuana industry and brought the suit on behalf of several marijuana dispensary owners and pot users, names elected officials and tax-collecting agencies as defendants in the complaint.
Voters in Colorado and Washington state approved the legalization of recreational pot use by adults in 2012 ballot measures.
Both are among nearly two dozen states and the District of Columbia that allow the use of medical marijuana, although cannabis remains illegal for any purpose under federal law.
The 37-page complaint – which includes a history of marijuana prohibition in the United States – said that because of the federal ban, people who buy or sell pot implicate themselves in a crime, which violates the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
"There can be no possible scenario where a person paying ... marijuana-specific taxes can also be in full compliance with federal law," the lawsuit said.
The first retail pot outlets opened in Colorado in January, and Washington is set to follow suit this year.
Corry also said the state’s 25 percent combined sales and excise taxes on marijuana sales have undermined what voters intended when they approved legalized cannabis in part to take the criminal element out of marijuana use.
"The tax rates are so high that the underground market has experienced resurgence in Colorado," Corry wrote.
Carolyn Tyler, a spokeswoman for Colorado Attorney General John Suthers, said the office will "aggressively" defend the state against any legal challenge.
"Mr. Corry’s claims are bizarre and lack legal and logical consistency," Tyler said.
Colorado has reaped almost $11 million in sales and excise taxes from recreational marijuana since retail pot shops opened in January, according to figures released this week by the state’s revenue department.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Jim Loney)
151 Comments
http://news.yahoo.com/marijuana-activists-sue-halt-colorado-pot-tax-collections-012023707.html
 

growingcrazy

Well-known member
Veteran
I think it is a way to get the feds to reclassify. Either they are going to have to stop collecting taxes( right, like government is going to let that happen..) or reclassify federally to allow taxation of marijuana.

Peace
GC
 

BOMBAYCAT

Well-known member
Veteran
The media claim there is a slight chance of it passing. The politicos are already getting hooked on the tax money so I don't expect them to let this one go.
 

guineapig

Active member
Veteran
1) Put all the money in a trust fund.

2) Make a billboard on the side of the road that shows the ever-increasing tax revenue
generated by Colorado Cannabis sales, a billboard that is constantly changing with up
to the second tax revenue figures that are constantly increasing.

3) Give the billboard a website and make it a tourist attraction so people can take their
pictures with the billboard.

4) Pay guineapig a huge royalty for generating this concept in the Guineapig Idea Factory
(trademark, all rights reserved).
 
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