Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 1999 Source: Hendersonville Times-News (NC) Copyright: 1999 Hendersonville Newspaper Corporation Contact: P.O. Box 490, Hendersonville, NC 28793 Fax: 828-692-2319 Author: John Patterson, AP TAXES ON ILLEGAL DRUGS AGAIN RULED CONSTITUTIONAL Raleigh (AP) - Splitting with the federal courts, the state Court of Appeals has ruled again that North Carolina's taxes on illegal drugs are not a criminal penalty. Joan Gore Milligan sued the state for a refund of the $12,252,95 in taxes and penalties she was charged after drug agents seized more than 2,200 grams of marijuana in a 1995 raid at her home. She paid the taxes under protest. In her lawsuit, she said the state taxes on marijuana and other drugs amount to a criminal penalty that is levied without due process, which would place her in unconstitutional double jeopary when criminal charges also are filed. "This court has held that the drug tax does not contain the 'punitive characteristics' necessary to transfer it into a criminal penalty," Judge Edward Greene wrote for the three-judge panel Tuesday. The court refused her demand for a refund. The state revised, and lowered, the taxes it charges on drugs after the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the taxes were so high they amounted to a penalty. "We are aware the Fourth Circuit has held the North Carolina drug tax to constitute a criminal penaly," Greene wrote in a footnote to the opinion. "We are not, however, bound by that decision." - --- MAP posted-by: allan wilkinson