Pubdate: Sun, 05 Oct 1997 Source: Houston Chronicle, page 1D Contact: Website: http://www.chron.com/ State is pressed to reexamine antidrug tax Constitutionality in question By JOHN W. GONZALEZ Copyright 1997 Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau AUSTIN It was heralded the "Al Capone Tax," an innovative and lucrative way for the state to heap torment on Texas drug traffickers by requiring them to pay taxes on their illicit merchandise. But almost a decade after it was approved by the Legislature in a fervent antidrug climate, officials have been forced to take a fresh look at the law taxing illegal drugs. While $2.3 million has been collected from 140 defendants and more than 9,000 others have been billed for $13.2 billion in taxes, penalties and interest, questions have arisen about the constitutionality and effectiveness of the antidrug tax. Collections amount to a tiny percentage of assessments, but more significantly, the U.S. Supreme Court has called the levy an unconstitutional form of punishment when coupled with criminal sanctions. In 1994, the court ruled on a similar law in Montana, saying that such a tax which, in effect, makes an offender pay for his crime twice amounts to a violation of the doublejeopardy prohibition clause of the U.S. Constitution. Since then, state lawmakers have done nothing to modify the 1989 law, putting the state's chief tax collector in a quandary. Comptroller John Sharp said he wants to enforce the law "to the fullest extent possible," but he currently issues assessments to drug dealers only at the request of prosecutors. In a letter in July to Attorney General Dan Morales seeking a formal opinion, Sharp said he fears the tax has become "a cheap 'get out of jail' card used by sinister drug dealers with highpriced criminal defense lawyers." Some lawyers have urged clients to pay drug taxes to preclude prosecution. However, the comptroller has declined to accept payments under those circumstances, insisting on prosecutors' approval before doing so. Prosecutors routinely use the tax liability threat as leverage in pleabargaining with drug dealers. Some accused and convicted Texans have had their bank accounts frozen after being hit with huge tax liens that also prevent them from making purchases or inheriting money. At the same time, several convicted defendants are demanding refunds of taxes already paid, citing the doublejeopardy rulings. Their demands are part of the reason Sharp is seeking the attorney general's opinion. In 1995, the 14th Court of Appeals in Houston cited the earlier U.S. Supreme Court decision in ruling in favor of marijuana defendant Mark Stennett of Houston. The appeals court told prosecutors that henceforth they must decide between seeking tax payments or jail time from drug defendants. That ruling was upheld in 1996 by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which earlier this year refused to reconsider its decision. Yet the Legislature took no action in this year's session, leaving Sharp wondering how to apply the law. In his letter to Morales, Sharp wrote that "a number of taxpayers and their attorneys have contacted my office demanding the immediate release of state tax liens or the refund" of drug taxes already collected. The comptroller said he recognized that the court had created serious questions about the validity of the law, "but I also recognize that the court did not declare the tax unconstitutional and am aware of my responsibility to enforce the state's tax laws." One criminal defense expert said Morales is the wrong person to ask for an opinion because he already is on record defending the law in previous appeals. Attorney Stan Schneider of Houston, who represents Stennett, also said officials appear reluctant to admit the tax is a punishment. "I have a client who has a $400,000 lien against him. He can't buy a car, he can't do anything until he pays off that note," Schneider said of his client, whose conviction has since been set aside. "That is serious economic punishment and he spent over a month in jail," said the lawyer, who has several other such clients. "The politicians are embarrassed because they didn't foresee that the law could affect the rights of individuals," Schneider said. "They wanted the tax assessed to punish them economically. Plus they wanted to lock them up. And they don't like the fact that they can't have it both ways."