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ATTORNEYS GENERAL, LORILLARD REACH AGREEMENT TO
REDUCE ILLEGAL INTERNET CIGARETTE SALES
New protocol will reduce supply to illegal Internet cigarette traffickers
Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, Jr. today announced that Lorillard
Tobacco Co. (“Lorillard”)
has agreed to implement new measures to prevent the illegal sale of its
cigarettes over the Internet and
through the mail. These protocols are being adopted nationwide and voluntarily
by Lorillard pursuant to
an agreement reached with 33 Attorneys General across the country. A similar
agreement was reached
with Philip Morris USA in January. “Internet sales of cigarettes can and do harm
kids,” said General
Curran. “Most internet age verification systems are inadequate, and without that
critical safeguard it is
much more difficult to keep cigarettes out of the hands of kids. Studies show
however, the longer we
keep those cigarettes out of kids hands, the better the chance they will NOT
become lifetime smokers.”
The protocols provide for: (a) termination of shipments of cigarettes to any of
Lorillard’s direct customers
that the Attorneys General have found to be engaging in illegal Internet and
mail order sales; (b)
reduction in the amount of product made available to direct customers found by
the Attorneys General to
be engaged in the illegal resale of Lorillard’s cigarettes to the Internet
vendors; and (c) suspension from
the company’s incentive programs any retailer found by the Attorneys General to
be engaging in such
illegal sales.
The Attorneys General believe that virtually all sales of cigarettes over the
Internet are illegal because
the sellers are violating one or more state and federal laws, including: (1)
state age verification laws; (2)
the federal Jenkins Act (which requires that such sales be reported to state
authorities); (3) state laws
prohibiting or regulating the direct shipment of cigarettes to consumers; (4)
state and federal tax laws;
(5) federal mail and wire fraud statutes; (6) the federal Contraband Cigarette
Trafficking Act. Many of the
sales made by foreign websites also violate federal smuggling, cigarette
labeling and money laundering
laws.
Today’s agreement is another major development in multi-pronged efforts by state
Attorneys General to
restrict the payment, shipment and supply operations of the illegal Internet
cigarette traffickers. In March
2005, Attorneys General announced that the major credit card companies had all
agreed to stop
processing credit card payments for the Internet retailers. Later in the year
DHL, UPS and FedEx
agreed to stop shipping packages for the vendors engaged in these illegal sales.