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IRS Rules Against Oakland Marijuana Dispensary, Demands Millions

Submitted by Phillip Smith on (Issue #703)
Politics & Advocacy

In a decision that advocates warn could cripple the industry, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has ruled that Oakland's Harborside Health Center cannot deduct standard business expenses on its taxes and sent the dispensary a whopping $2.5 million tax bill.

Most businesses are able to deduct standard business expenses, such as rent and payroll, from their federal tax bill, but Harborside chief financial officer Luigi Zamarra told the Bay Citizen the IRS had determined the dispensary cannot deduct standard business expenses because it is involved in "the trafficking of controlled substances."

Harborside is the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the country, with more than 83,000 members, and pulled in $22 million in sales last year. It has already paid the IRS $500,000 in taxes for 2007 and 2008, the years for which the agency now claims it owes the additional $2.5 million.

Although the IRS is happy to take Harborside's money, the federal government considers marijuana nothing more than a Schedule I controlled substance. The IRS attack on Harborside is part of an Obama administration assault on medical marijuana distribution using the regulatory apparatus of a number of federal agencies, ranging from the Treasury to the DEA.

Harborside said it would appeal the ruling and warned that if it stood, the entire medical marijuana dispensary industry could be endangered.

"We can't live with the conclusions that the IRS has come to and neither can the industry," Zamarra said. "If the IRS ultimately prevails, we would close our doors and go away because the business model wouldn't work,” he said.

Ironically, on the same day it announced the adverse IRS ruling, Harborside also announced it had paid the last installment of its $1,081,450 tax bill to the city of Oakland, which collects a 5% tax on dispensaries.



Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.

Comments

William Aiken (not verified)

In reply to by KeLeMi (not verified)

I recall Ethan Nadelman speaking at the New Mexico drug policy conference about some of the remarks President Obama made that really irritated him as he pandered to the  pro drug war crowd and how he was giving President Obama the benefit of the doubt because he was a different person than Bush. Well, Obama's been different all right. Different in a worse way.  Bush get rid of the Byrne Grants which Obama reinstated as a cheap badge to show his law enforcement stripes. Obama has outspent Bush on drug interdiction. Bush never claimed the drug war was a failure like Candidate Obama did, but if you compare Obama to Bush, it's hard to say who's been worst in pursuing and funding the drug war.

I would hope that Drug Policy Alliance members and other reformers wise up and see President for what he is...a hypocrite. He deserves a earful from us. Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss. I for one won't get fool by Obama, again. Vote for Gary Johnson.  

 

Wed, 10/05/2011 - 9:15am Permalink
doc (not verified)

In order to qualify as trafficking, the Drugs would have to cross State lines. Also, if they paid 1 million to the State at 5%---then 2.5 million would only be an additional 12% that still leave a lot of profits. 22 million a year made and have to pay 3.5 million in taxes---

Still not a bad job.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 3:04am Permalink
the stewmaker. (not verified)

In reply to by doc (not verified)

A war that cant be won is what this drug war is.  I have made millions of dollars in this game were the underground traffic of money an trees that moves nation wide an has made me a million air. facts are facts an weed works i think we can all agree that weed gets us high,an until we change i will find a way to get my product (OGkush) to the people of this nation. laws are put in place for people like me to brake them if its not kush ill push coke if not coke then ill pitch meth so no matter what ill make millions an the people will get the products they want. To win the war on drugs you must make money worthless, an we all now how much we love money. we all have used it an we all liked it until we change who we are, we will be a narco based people thanks to the gov't. the biggest drug pusher ever lets not forget the c.i.a sold crack, an obama snorted coke. so with that off my chest i better get back to counting this stack of racks. god willing. the stewmaker...

Thu, 10/13/2011 - 2:40am Permalink

First of all, unless IRS grants them immunity, all these businesses should be filing 5th amendment returns.  If they do get immunity and so are obligated to file, they'll have to restructure their books to make their taxes affordable.  Basically that'll involve offloading their expenses to another entity from the one that collects fees.  For instance, they can make their sales to customers contingent on their customers being paid members of a non-profit club that picks up the costs.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 11:46am Permalink
CBRRACER (not verified)

I would tell the IRS when OUR Government pays it's bills to it's creditors then and only then shall any bill be considered to be paid, our Government can't even balance a budget..... Pitiful !

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 11:50am Permalink
saynotohypocrisy (not verified)

His  contempt for medicinal marijuana is really gross (and Cuomo's, Cuomo has a good chance of being the Democratic nominee in 2016) . I get particularly annoyed when women and blacks and gays are bigoted against marijuana or other illegal drug users. I just think their own history of being discriminated against would sensitize them and make them offended by alcohol supremacist bigotry, but it doesn't much seem to work that way.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 12:07pm Permalink
Tucsonan (not verified)

The President didn't create the current laws, nor does he direct their enforcement or have the authority block their enforcement. The agencies are solely responsible for their actions. Also the President can't make Congress pass laws and with a Republican controlled House there is little hope of change for the better.

To those who say "I won't vote for Obama", then what are you going to do, vote for a Republican or weaken the Democrat vote by voting for some minor party candidate who has no chance or by not voting at all? Having Republicans in charge is the worse thing for drug law reform. To get the nomination as the Republican candidate for President they would have to be overtly opposed to any change in the drug laws, that is except to make them harsher.

Without Congress getting a bill to his desk to be signed into law, Obama can only make policy statements and recommendations that in themselves do not and can not supersede the law. No government agency or entity has any legal obligation to abide by such policies by the President instead of enforcing current laws.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 1:21pm Permalink
Trogo (not verified)

In reply to by Tucsonan (not verified)

It is rather disconcerting to me to hear statements such as "..vote for a Republican or weaken the Democrat vote by voting for some minor party candidate who has no chance or by not voting at all?" so frequently. When will people get away from the "lesser of two evils" ideology? Recall, the lesser of two evils, is still evil.

Besides, your statement is incongruous from what voting is intended. It should not be one party against another, yet the reason it has been that way is because so many perpetuate the fear of the "other" candidate. I vote for who I want to win, not for the person who may have a better chance against someone I don't want to win. This is in parallel to such claims that one candidate "steals" votes from another. That may be true, but only in the mind of those who lose.

Maybe someday we will understand that we all want the same things; happiness, (actual) freedom, security (health, safety, & sustained rights), individuality, privacy, etc. And then, maybe...just maybe, we will stop bickering over wedge issues, deal with the crumbling political infrastructure, stop demonizing and belittling each other, and work as one to resolve important issues. Ah well, maybe in a pipe dream.

Lastly, I do agree that Obama, or any president, can't enforce many things. However, the influence, decisions, opinion, and (more importantly) placement of individuals in specific key positions/appointments, can, and does, have an enormous impact.

"...rights aren't "rights" if someone can take 'em away; they're privileges."
-George Carlin
Thu, 10/06/2011 - 6:48pm Permalink
Tucsonan (not verified)

In reply to by Trogo (not verified)

To clarify my previous reply; I was speaking from the perspective of a realist not an idealist, so I spoke in terms of the political party system as it is right now, not of an idealistic perspective of how I wish it was, though I do wish it were different, that desire however does not change the reality of how it is for the current election, that being there are only two viable primary political parties, Democrat and Republican.

The context of the replies that I was responding to was of a desire for drug law reform from an apparently Liberal perspective and in that context, with the two primary parties, it is a political fact that to have reasonable chance to be selected as the Republican candidate for President you must be openly oppose to such, making in my view Obama by default the best choice in that regard exclusively, not speaking to what degree or of any other point.

For the current election, it doesn't matter how it is intended to be or how we may wish it to be, to make the most of ones vote in the context of drug law reform, you must vote for one of the two primary party candidates who is most likely, not least likely, to support or at least not oppose your views on such. To vote any other way is idealistic and may actually strengthen the candidate who is least likely to support your views. Additionally I do not see how voting for as I said "the mostly likely [to support]" of two main candidates, is in itself a "lesser of two evils" type of vote since to what degree is not specified or implied in that.

Also the reason I did not bring up the points of "influence, decisions, opinion, and (more importantly) placement of individuals" is because I was addressing replies that were in the context of or a long the lines of the claim or belief that Obama is deliberately and/or actively guiding the enforcement of drug laws. Though those points are related, they were not immediately relevant in that context, so I intentionally left them out so as to not clutter the point I was making that he does not directly control enforcement.


 

Fri, 10/07/2011 - 11:06pm Permalink
Steve Newcomb (not verified)

Here's a fix-it fantasy for you:

Dennis Kucinich and Ron Paul each separately have an epiphany: it's that their allegiance to their parties is inconsistent with any possibility of their having any influence on the future.

Through an accident somehow involving Occupy Wall Street, they discover that they have each come independently to that conclusion.  They break with their parties and put themselves on the ballot as the Zuccotti Party candidates, with Paul for President and Kucinich for Vice President (or, less likely, the other way around).  Of course, they win, because the ticket deprives the Dem/Rep duopoly of both of its voter bases, and because both men have generally said what they actually think, both have generally acted in a manner consistent with their words, each appeals strongly to the spiritual root of one half of the duopoly, neither is owned by the money, and both know where bodies are buried on Capitol Hill.

 

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 3:23pm Permalink
Vanguard (not verified)

Obama has some control over HIS cabinet. If he wants to claim otherwise his re-election campaign will become: "Vote for me. I'm weak."

He gets my vote, but not my money.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 3:46pm Permalink
Steve Newcomb (not verified)

Here's a fix-it fantasy for you:

Dennis Kucinich and Ron Paul each separately have an epiphany: it's that their allegiance to their parties is inconsistent with any possibility of their having any influence on the future.

Through an accident somehow involving Occupy Wall Street, they discover that they have each come independently to that conclusion.  They break with their parties and put themselves on the ballot as the Liberty Party candidates, with Paul for President and Kucinich for Vice President (or, less likely, the other way around).  Of course, they win, because the ticket deprives the Dem/Rep duopoly of both of its voter bases, because both men have generally said what they actually think, both have generally acted in a manner consistent with their words, each appeals strongly to the spiritual root of one half of the duopoly, neither is owned by the money, and both know where bodies are buried on Capitol Hill.

Thu, 10/06/2011 - 3:56pm Permalink
borden (not verified)

In reply to by doc (not verified)

Harborside is a nonprofit. The federal government just doesn't grant it the usual nonprofit privileges, because of the marijuana. They state recognizes them as a tax-exempt nonprofit, and their budget is published every year.

Obama is part of it because he ultimately sets the policies -- he can't unilaterally change the statutes, but he could direct the IRS to use its discretion in targeting their resources on the functions the IRS was intended for. The initiative for this might not come from Obama personally, and I suspect it does not, but the buck stops with the top guy.

Fri, 10/07/2011 - 3:06pm Permalink

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