In 1995, Stеphen Dye was convicted by a Wisconsin jury of possession with intent to deliver cocaine. After exhausting his state remedies, Dye filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the district court, arguing that his criminal conviction was a violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution as he had already been subjected to a tax assessment and seizure based upon his possession of the same drugs. The district court denied Dye’s petition and he now appeals. For the reasons stated herein, we reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
On March 17, 1994, police executed a search warrant at Stephen Dye’s home. During the search, police found 11.9 grams of cocaine. The cocaine did not bear the Wisconsin Controlled Substance Tax Stamps required under Wisconsin Statutes § 139.88, which mandated that drug dealers (defined as those who possess more than seven grams of cocaine) pay an occupational tax upon acquisition or possession of controlled substances. 1
A few days later, the state of Wisconsin instituted a collection determination procedure to collect the delinquent taxes, interest, and penalty fees due under the Wisconsin Controlled Substance Tax. The state sought and received a court order freezing Dye’s assets, and later seized $4,896 from Dye’s bank account. The money seized was returned to Dye in August 1994, but the tax assessment remained in effect for an аdditional three years until the Department of Revenue cancelled the assessment in May 1997.
In addition to the tax assessment and seizure, Dye was subsequently criminally charged for possession of more than five grams of cocaine with intent to deliver. After a trial, Dye was convicted and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment. Throughout Dye’s trial and post-conviction proceedings, he argued that the criminal charges following the seizure of his assets constituted double punishment in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution.
II. Disoussion
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment consists of three separate constitutional protections: it prohibits a second prosecution for the same offense after an acquittal, it prohibits a second prosecution for the same offense after a conviction, and it prohibits multiple criminal punishments for the same offense.
See Hudson v. United States,
The drug tax is on its face part of a civil statutory scheme.
See
Wis. Stat. § 139.88 (“There is imposed on dealers, upon acquisition or possession by them in this state, an occupational tax at the following rates _ [p]er gram or part of a gram of other schedule I controlled substances or schedule II controlled substances, whether pure or impure, measured when in the dealer’s possession, $200”). This, however, does not end our analysis as to whether the drug tax enacts a criminal punishment. “Even in those cases where the legislature ‘has indicated an intention to establish a civil penalty, wе have inquired further whether the statutory scheme was so punitive either in purpose or effect’ as to ‘transform what was clearly intended as a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.’ ”
Hudson,
To determine whether a civil penalty is so punitive that it is should be characterized as criminal punishment, we must consider the factors listed by the Supreme Court in
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez,
Using the
Kennedy
factors, we conclude that the Wisconsin drug tax was so punitive in purpose and effect that it constituted a criminal punishment. The Appellee concedes that the Wisconsin legislature enacted the tax in order to promote the traditional aims of punishment such as retribution and deterrence. It is further admitted that the tax is only applied to behavior that is already a crime. And although the Appellee insists that this tax served an alternative revenue-raising purpose, the Wisconsin Supreme Court properly rejected this argument in
State v. Hall,
Furthermore, the high tax rate is indicative of criminal рunishment rather than revenue-raising goals. According to Wisconsin Statutes § 139.88, cocaine is “taxed” at $200 per gram. The penalty for
*1105
not paying the tax as soon as one obtains possession of the drugs is another $200 per gram.
See
Wis. Stat. § 71.83. Our research indicates that cocaine has a market value of approximately $80 per gram.
See
Drug Enforcement Administration,
Illegal Drug Price and Purity Report, at
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/intel/02058 /02058.html# 3 (stating that one gram of cocaine in Chicago had a market value of $75-150 from 1998-2001);
see also United States v. Hill,
In reaching this decision, we acknowledge that a few of the
Kennedy
factors are not present in this case. Specifically, monetary fines do not involve an affirmative disability or restraint and have not historically been viewed as punishment.
See Hudson,
We find support for our conclusion in the closely analogous case of
Department of Revenue of Montana v. Kurth Ranch,
In
Kurth Ranch,
the Supreme Court found that the Montana drug tax was a punitive tax, and therefore subject to double jeopardy analysis, due to a combinatiоn of several factors. One of these factors was that the tax assessment was more than eight times the market value of the drugs taxed, which the Court characterized as “a remarkably high tax.”
Id.
at 780,
Notably, all of these “exceptional” features are also present in the Wisconsin drug tax. Just like the Montana drug tax, the Wisconsin tax imposes a high tax rate, is conditioned on the commission of a crime, and was applied to the Appellant *1106 after the drugs were confiscated and presumably destroyed by the state.
The Appellee does not quarrel with the closely analogous nature of
Kurth Ranch,.
but rather argues that
Kurth Ranch
is no longer good law. It is argued that
Kurth Ranch
was derived from
United States v. Halper,
While
Kurth Ranch
discussed
Halper,
the analysis used in
Kurth Ranch
did not mirror the analysis used in
Halper. See Kurth Ranch,
Rather,
Kurth Ranch
used a test much more akin to that set forth in Hudson.
2
First, the Court stated that a tax will only be viewed as a criminal punishment when “the penalizing features of the so-called tax” cause it to lose “its character as such and become[ ] a mere penalty with the characteristics of regulation and punishment.”
Kurth Ranch,
511 U.S.at 779,
The similarity of the tests was acknowledged in
Hudson
itself,- when the Court stated in a footnote that
Kurth Ranch
“applied a Kennedy-like test before concluding that Montana’s dangerous drug tax was ‘the functional equivalent of a successive criminal prosecution.’ ”
Hudson, 522
*1107
U.S. at 102, n. 6,
We conclude that
Kurth Ranch
is still good law. We further conclude that under both
Kurth Ranch
and
Hudson,
the Wisconsin drug tax is properly characterized as a criminal punishment for the purposes of double jeopardy analysis. Therefore, we must proceed to discuss whether jeopardy attached to this tax assessment and seizure. After all, it is a fundamental principle of double jeopardy law “that an accused must suffer jeopardy before he can suffer double jeopardy.”
Serfass v. United States,
Before we begin this analysis, however, we pause to note that both parties agree that the standards set forth in the Antiter-rorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) do not apply to this case because the Wisconsin Court of Appeals found that the double jeopardy issue was moot and thus did not analyze thе claim on its merits.
Cf. Moore v. Parke,
As this Court has previously discussed, the Supreme Court has not deсided the issue of when jeopardy attaches to a taxing procedure.
See United States v. Wameke,
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We conclude that the purposes of the Double Jeopardy Clause are best served by the latter rule. This case is analogous to those where a defendant is sentenced to both a fíne and imprisonment when the statute allows only a fine or imprisonment. In such cases, if the fine has been paid, the defendant has “fully performed, completed, and endured one of the alternative punishments which the law prescribed for that offence” and therefore the court’s “power to punish for that of-fence was at an end.”
See Ex Parte Lange,
We note that this case is distinguishable from those where a civil forfeiture proceeding takes place without opposition and the defendant never becomes a party to the proceeding.
See United States v. Torres,
For these reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of habeas corpus. In doing so, we emphasize that this case does not stand for the proposition that Wisconsin cannot both tax and imprison those who violate drug laws. It is well-established that cumulative punishments may be meted out as long as they result from a single prоceeding.
See, e.g., Kurth Ranch,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of Dye’s petition for habeas relief is REVERSED.
Notes
. This version of the tax was found unconstitutional by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 1997.
See State v. Hall,
. As was already discussed,
Hudson
set forth a two-part test under which courts first analyze whether the legislature intended to create a civil or criminal sanction; and second determine whether a statute designated as civil is so punitive in either form or effect that it should be charactеrized as criminal despite the legislature's contrary intent.
See Hudson v. United States, 522
U.S. 93, 103-04,
. For this reason, the Appellee’s mootness arguments are without merit. The Appellee cites no case law, and we can find none, that supports the proposition that jeopardy can "unattach” once it has attached. Dye's claim is therefore not rendered moot by the return of his money because jeopardy attached at the moment it was seized.
