Jim Carlson, the in-your-face headshop owner who defied Duluth authorities for four years before he was convicted last month of selling synthetic drugs, is not going quietly into federal prison.
His attorney has asked U.S. District Judge David Doty for a new trial, the precursor for an appeal to the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court to have the conviction overturned, and some legal observers say he has a chance of winning. The attorney, Randall Tigue, has asked that Carlson be released pending his sentencing.
Synthetic drugs may be addictive and debilitating, but trying to outlaw them remains a cat-and-mouse game for law enforcement because every time one drug is prohibited another one pops up. Congress passed a law banning analogues that mimic the effect of traditional illegal drugs, but some consider the law to be flawed.
"I think if Carlson has a chance on appeal, it's on the grounds that the statute is void for vagueness," former U.S. Attorney Tom Heffelfinger says. "Statutes need to be clear so that people who are governing their behavior have a clear guidance of what they can and cannot do and when the statute is vague, or not clear, there is a body of law that says that the statute is unconstitutional."
But Paul Murphy, who was chief of the criminal section under Heffelfinger, says he believes it's not a close call for the Court of Appeals, noting that in May a panel for the Eighth Circuit upheld the conviction of a synthetic drug dealer who challenged the clarity of the synthetic drug law.
"It is clear that the Eighth Circuit has ruled that the analogue statute is not unconstitutionally vague," says Murphy.
Until this year Carlson's store, the Last Place on Earth, was a magnet for addicts and others seeking what they thought were legal drug-enduced highs. Lines stretched down the street and curled around the corner.
Store closed for a year
Duluth business owners, police and community leaders steamed over the impact on the neighborhood, until the store was closed down this summer following a federal raid.