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Sales Tax Lawyers Providence RI

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sales Tax Lawyers. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sales Tax Lawyers, including "The Use Tax - Collecting Your Own Sales Tax". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Providence, RI that will answer all of your questions about Sales Tax Lawyers.

Normand G Benoit
401-861-8245
180 S MAIN ST
PROVIDENCE, RI
Kathleen A Ryan
401-861-8200
180 S MAIN ST
PROVIDENCE, RI
David C Morganelli
401-861-8283
180 S MAIN ST
PROVIDENCE, RI
Katie A. Ahern
401-274-2000
50 Kennedy Plaza, Suite 1500
Providence, RI
Michael Jonathan Chazan
401-739-2900
1 CITIZENS PLZ CITIZENS BANK BLDG
PROVIDENCE, RI
Brian P. Gallogly
401-276-2656
121 South Main Street
Providence, RI
Lawrence Douglas Hunt
774-206-8210
180 S MAIN ST
PROVIDENCE, RI
Michelle Ruberto Fonseca
617-305-2164
1 FINANCIAL PLZ STE 1400
PROVIDENCE, RI
John Russell
401-274-7200
1 CITIZENS PLZ CITIZENS BANK BLDG
PROVIDENCE, RI
Franklin Moore Mclaughlin IV
401-421-5115
148 West River Street, Suite 1E
Providence, RI
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The Use Tax - Collecting Your Own Sales Tax

The Use Tax - Collecting Your Own Sales Tax

If you buy things online, there is a very good chance you are breaking laws in your state. Why? Under the Use Tax, you are supposed to be collecting your own sales tax and sending it in.

The web is fraught with peril for states when it comes to passing laws, tax or otherwise. Why is this? Jurisdiction is the legal term. The primary problem is the sites operating on the web appear everywhere, not just in a particular state. As a result, who has the right to pass laws regarding them?

When SPAM was such a huge problem, the states started passing laws regarding it. A problem quickly arose. When a spammer was caught, which law applied? Was it California, Virginia, New York, Florida and so on? The answer was none of them applied because the nature of the transaction was national. The CAN-SPAM Act was eventually passed and the state laws were terminated.

A similar situation arose with Internet purchases. States wanted to require websites to collect and pay taxes. The sites complained to the courts that this was a huge burden because they would end up having to track, pay and file sales tax returns for each of the 50 states. The Supreme Court agreed and struck down the relevant state laws.

The states have been unable to come up with a solution to go after internet sites, but that doesn't mean they haven't figured out how to go after you! Most have passed something called a "use tax." This is a law that says when you purchase...

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