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Ads Link Cigarette Taxes, Organized Crime
AP | 5/09/03 | DAVID B. CARUSO

Posted on 05/09/2003 3:36:00 AM PDT by kattracks

PHILADELPHIA, May 09, 2003 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- The Lorillard Tobacco Co. is hoping people are more afraid of mobsters than they are of lung cancer. The nation's fourth-largest tobacco company, maker of Newports and Kents, launched an advertising campaign in three states this week that claims higher cigarette taxes encourage organized crime.

One ad featured a picture of a scowling, beefy man wearing a pinstriped suit and a pinky ring, posing next to a black sedan and a suitcase stuffed with cash.

"The mob, smugglers, and other street criminals are making a fortune selling illegal cigarettes while legitimate small businesses are forced to cut jobs," the ad reads.

The newspaper, radio and billboard ads began appearing Wednesday and are scheduled to run for a month in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware - three of at least 29 states where lawmakers have suggested raising cigarette taxes.

The ads specifically take aim at New York City's taxes, saying they created a market for smugglers who make knockoffs of name brands or buy cartons in other states and resell them.

William V. Corr, executive director of the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, called the ads "deceptive and desperate."

"Lorillard is trying to divert attention from what they really want, which is lower-cost cigarettes," he said.

John Kirkwood, chief executive of the American Lung Association, acknowledged cigarette smuggling is a problem, but said eliminating tobacco taxes isn't the way to deal with it.

"Maybe we shouldn't have laws against drug use either, because people are going to go out and smuggle drugs?" he said. "The reasoning is fallacious."

Few dispute that cigarette smuggling has been a mainstay of organized crime.

Federal agents in April announced the breakup of smuggling rings that made $20 million buying cigarettes in states like Virginia, where the state tax on a pack of cigarettes is 2.5 cents, and shipping them to places like New York, where state and local taxes are about $3 per pack.

In another bust, authorities charged a group with buying cigarettes in North Carolina and trucking them to Michigan. Investigators said proceeds went to finance the militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Anti-smoking organizations claim tobacco companies secretly encourage smuggling by oversupplying wholesalers in low-tax states, knowing tons of cigarettes will be bought for sale elsewhere.

In February, Canadian authorities charged tobacco manufacturer JTI-Macdonald Corp. with smuggling cigarettes to evade $805 million in duties and taxes. The company denied the charge.

Steve Watson, spokesman for Greensboro, N.C.-based Lorillard, said higher cigarette taxes don't alter people's smoking habits. He said merchants and smokers simply turn to illegal sources when prices get too high.

In January, Delaware's governor proposed doubling the state's cigarette tax from 24 cents to 50 cents a pack. New Jersey recently raised taxes by 70 cents and has proposed another increase to $1.90 per pack.

Pennsylvania more than tripled the cigarette tax last year, to $1 per pack, and state officials have discussed raising it again to help doctors defray insurance costs.

---

On the Net:

Lorillard ad campaign: http://www.notaxnocrime.com/

Campaign For Tobacco Free Kids: http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/

By DAVID B. CARUSO Associated Press Writer



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crime; health; healthnazis; hypocricy; pc; pufflist; smuggling; taxation; taxes; tobacco
"Lorillard is trying to divert attention from what they really want, which is lower-cost cigarettes," he said.

And of course, the do gooders in the govt. don't want the tax $$$, they only want to "help" smokers.

1 posted on 05/09/2003 3:36:00 AM PDT by kattracks
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To: SheLion
ping
2 posted on 05/09/2003 3:36:34 AM PDT by kattracks
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To: kattracks
Federal Tobacco Tax Revenues have risen over decades to about $5 BILLION/year. However, in 1995 Billy Clintoooon projected in the budget that he submitted to Congress that those revenues would increase to more than $20 BILLION/year.

Of course that didn't happen (couldn't get the votes for the legislation)!

Interestingly though, if we take the 'hoped for' $15 BILLION/year increase and multiply it be the duration of the the Tobacco Law Suit Settlement (25 years), we arrive at $375 BILLION, which is comparable to the amount of the Settlement.

So what they couldn't legislate, they got through the pimps of the legal industry. Also, Hubert Humphrey was one of the leading Attorney Generals, who pursued this litigation. He also, is the candidate for Governor who lost a 20 point lead a couple of weeks before the election, and was beaten by Jessie Ventura. It seems Humphrey has fallen off the edge of the Earth!
3 posted on 05/09/2003 4:33:44 AM PDT by leprechaun9
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To: kattracks
This is one of those "but of course" propositions that people mostly don't like to face.

Taxes and other restrictions on trade always encourage the entry of the criminal element. The harsher they are -- that is, the less free the market is made -- the more incentive criminals will have to enter the market.

"If you destroy a free market," said Winston Churchill, "you create a black market." What sort of creature dominates in a black market?

Now, now, let's not always see the same hands!

Freedom, Wealth, and Peace,
Francis W. Porretto
Visit The Palace Of Reason:
http://palaceofreason.com

4 posted on 05/09/2003 5:22:06 AM PDT by fporretto (Curmudgeon Emeritus, Palace of Reason)
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