Pubdate: Sun, 22 Nov 2009 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2009 The Star-Journal Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: John Suthers Note: John Suthers is Colorado attorney general. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) APPLY STATE SALES TAX TO MEDICAL MARIJUANA A Taxing Problem In 2000, Colorado voters passed Amendment 20 to allow patients to use medical marijuana with a doctor's certification. Communities across the state are grappling with the issue now. In Pueblo, City Council has placed a three-month and the county commissioners a four-month moratorium on whether to permit and regulate medical marijuana dispensaries. (Colorado Attorney General John Suthers last week gave Gov. Bill Ritter his formal opinion on applying the state sales tax to the purchase and sale of medical marijuana. Here are excerpts:) Colorado law is clear: Medical marijuana, in most instances, should be subject to state and local sales taxes. This formal opinion should help clear up many of the uncertainties surrounding the taxation of medical marijuana. Many other questions surrounding medical marijuana and Amendment 20 to the Colorado Constitution will have to be resolved by the courts or the Colorado Legislature. The formal opinion, available at www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov/ag_opinions/2009 , addresses: Medical marijuana is "tangible personal property" and is subject to the state sales tax, unless eligible for a specific sales tax exemption. Medical marijuana is not dispensed in accordance with a prescription (and, therefore, is not exempt from sales tax). Medical marijuana transactions generally do not qualify for the agricultural tax exemptions (except for the sale of seeds). Unless subject to a particular exemption, it is unlawful for any individual or enterprise to engage in the business of selling at retail without first having obtained a retail sales license issued by the Colorado Department of Revenue. The obligation to collect and remit sales tax due is borne by the vendor (seller). Amendment 20 (adopted by Colorado voters in 2000), left many legal questions unanswered. The Blue Book (legislative voters' guide) stated that under the proposed amendment, possession of marijuana would still be illegal in Colorado. Consequently, Amendment 20 provides certain protections from state criminal liability for qualifying patients and primary caregivers, but "nothing in the amendment protects their original suppliers from prosecution or conviction on drug-related charges." Further complicating the application of Amendment 20, federal law prohibits the manufacture, distribution, dispensing or possession with intent to manufacture, distribute or dispense marijuana. . . . Despite the legal confusion surrounding the medical marijuana industry, the taxation question is relatively straightforward. . . . Colorado law contains no sales tax exemption for legally prohibited or otherwise unauthorized sales. Sales of medical marijuana are subject to state sales tax, unless a specific sales tax exemption applies. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D