Former Tax Judge Indicted for Tax Evasion Wrote Cannabusiness Decision
Diane Kroupa helped establish the confusing rules for paying taxes on income from marijuana sales.

A former U.S. Tax Court judge who was recently accused of cheating on her taxes wrote a 2012 decision that continues to complicate the finances of state-licensed marijuana merchants. According to an indictment announced yesterday, Diane Kroupa and her husband, Robert Fackler, disguised personal spending as business expenses on returns the couple filed from 2004, the year after she was appointed to the court, and 2012, the year she wrote an opinion that made it harder for medical marijuana dispensaries to deduct business expenses by attributing them to services other than the sale of cannabis.
Kroupa was applying Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code, a provision aimed at drug dealers who are conscientious enough to file tax returns. Section 280E says "no deduction or credit shall be allowed for any amount paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business if such trade or business…consists of trafficking in controlled substances…which is prohibited by Federal law." Since marijuana is still banned by federal law, Section 280E applies even to cannabusinesses that states consider legitimate.
Citing a 2007 U.S. Tax Court decision that let Californians Helping to Alleviate Medical Problems (CHAMP) deduct expenses related to "counseling and other caregiving services" even though the organization also distributed marijuana, Martin Olive, the owner of another San Francisco dispensary, the Vapor Room Herbal Center, argued that the bulk of his expenses likewise were unrelated to "trafficking in controlled substances." Kroupa rejected that claim, saying Olive essentially was engaged in the business of selling pot, even if those sales were accompanied by "incidental" services such as advice and yoga classes.
At the same time, Kroupa said Olive should be allowed to subtract his full "cost of goods sold" (COGS), which consisted mainly of his marijuana purchases, from his gross revenue, because COGS, which "is subtracted from gross receipts in determining a taxpayer's gross income," does not qualify as a "deduction" under Section 280E. Kroupa's ruling was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in 2015.
The upshot of the distinction between COGS and business expenses is rather counterintuitive. A marijuana merchant cannot deduct ordinary business expenses such as rent and wages unless he can persuasively attribute them to activities other than selling marijuana. But he can deduct the cost of the marijuana he sells—either the price he paid for it or the expenses he incurred in growing and processing it. While a can of coffee in the break room may not be deductible, a jar of Purple Urkle buds in the sales area is.
The maneuvers that led to charges against Kroupa and her husband sound straightforward by comparsion. Federal prosecutors in Minneosta say they falsely reported money they spent on vacations, jewelry, clothing, spa treatments, pilates classes, wine, dry cleaning, homes in Minnesota and Maryland, and other personal items as expenses related to Grassroots Consulting, a business run by Fackler. According to the indictment, these bogus business expenses reduced their tax bill by a total of "at least $400,000."
Kroupa and Fackler are each charged with conspiracy, tax evasion, making and subscribing false tax returns, and obstruction of an IRS audit. The first two charges are each punishable by up to five years in prison, while the latter two charges can get you up to three years and one year, respectively.
"Reporting personal expenses as business expenses on your tax returns is not tolerated, regardless of your job or position," said Richard Weber, chief of criminal investigation at the Internal Revenue Service. "We expect all taxpayers to follow the law—whether you are a business owner, individual, or government official. We all must play by the same rules and pay our fair share."
Many of the expenses the feds say are phony, including money spent on computers, travel, Mandarin lessons, cellphone service, housing expenses (assuming Fackler had home offices in two locations), and even wine (for entertaining clients?), sound like they could be at least arguably related to Fackler's consulting business. You can read this case as well-deserved justice for someone who cheated on her taxes while punishing others for doing so, or as an attempt to scare taxpayers away from claiming legitimate deductions that cut into the government's revenue. Or both.
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Who would be better at evading taxes than a tax judge?
Probably somebody who hasn't made the news for tax evasion.
A tax prosecutor, maybe?
I propose that from this day forth everyone involved in writing or enforcing tax laws should have to undergo an audit of their personal taxes each year by an independent authority.
With strict interpretation of the Tax Code and a death penalty for any government employee who fails to comply.
A good tax judge. She wasn't.
"We expect all taxpayers to follow the law?whether you are a business owner, individual, or government official?we all must play by the same rules and pay our fair share."
Once again - a fair price is whatever price is mutually agreed upon by consenting parties. Unless and until the IRS asks me how much I would like to pay and negotiates in good faith on the figure, there is no such thing as a"fair share" when it comes to how much taxes somebody else decides I should pay. I applaud anybody who avoids paying taxes in whatever way they can.
That being said - I can still point and laugh and enjoy the sight of a hypocritical goober smooch hoist by his own petard.
It would be nice if you could negotiate over receiving government "services" and the price for them. But then it wouldn't be government, would it?
While a can of coffee in the break room may not be deductible, a jar of Purple Urkle buds in the sales area is.
Good thing MJ is "legal", huh?
*And* ... Vote for Cruz -- he'll put an end to all this tax foolisHAHAHAHAHAAA!! Damn, couldn't quite get it out!
In lieu of woodchipping, perhaps someone should construct a giant nugget grinder?
i've got ten grinders conveniently attached to the ends of my arms!
a provision aimed at drug dealers who are conscientious enough to file tax returns
Conscience has nothing to do with it. Filing taxes is the smart business move in many cases. They didn't get Capone for racketeering or murder, you know.
That's just professional courtesy.
Dealers do have government to thank for the high prices they can ask.
that's something we all do together
And now we're high on Schadenfreude.
It's a hell of a drug.
I can't tell if this article is meant to be about Kroupa's indictment or the IRC 280E/COGS distinction. It's as though Sullum started on one thing and got distracted by the opportunity to write about pot.
I see that Kroupa was a Bush appointee. Too bad for her. Had she been a Democrat, she could have escaped liability through the "Gee I forgot to pay!" defense, which worked for David Dinkens, Charles Rangel, and Timothy Geithner.
The most atrocious aspect of the Geithner thing is that, after he got away with what he did, the IRS turned around and went after low-level World Bank employees, including summer interns, who did the same thing.
And this is why the govt should be financed by collection of an Excise Tax on consumption (Sales Tax), and the 16th-A should be repealed.