Get cheap cigarettes
Cheap cigarettes
online

That's why, after months of quiet investigation, California Attorney
General Bill Lockyer will file suit today against five out-of-state
Internet tobacco vendors, who are charged with not just peddling nicotine
to cheap cigarettes online store children but also dodging state cigarette taxes. It isn't hard for
kids to find weapons of mass destruction. They just have to click their
way to Dirt Cheap Cigarettes, one of a number of online tobacco merchants
that state officials say make it all too easy for minors to score smokes.
The lawsuit -- I'm looking at a copy right now --
says cheap cigarettes online store Lockyer's office has been cooperating with authorities in as many
as 39 other states to crack down on online cigarette sales. Many of
those states are expected to file similar actions in the weeks ahead.
"Every day in the United States more than 2,000 children begin
smoking cigarettes, and one-third of those children will die one day
from tobacco- related disease," the lawsuit says, adding that an
estimated 690 million packs of cigarettes are sold illegally to kids
each year nationwide.
Laura Kaplan, a deputy attorney general, declined to comment on specifics
of the lawsuit prior to it being filed in San Diego Superior Court,
where a number of tobacco cases have been heard. Nor could she cheap cigarettes online store specify
how many tobacco sales are made to minors each year via the Net.
But Kaplan said state investigators began looking into the situation
after receiving numerous complaints from parents, and found during an
undercover probe that kids had no trouble purchasing cigarettes online.

"Basically, these Web sites simply ask if you're 18," she
said. "If you say yes, and you have a credit card, you can make
the purchase."
Kaplan said hundreds of Web sites were investigated, many claiming affiliation
with Indian tribes throughout the country (thus raising questions of
sovereignty that California authorities were leery of getting into right
off the bat).
In the end, five non-Indian Internet retailers were cheap cigarettes online store singled out for
the state's lawsuit: Dirt Cheap Cigarettes in Missouri, Smokin 4 Less
in Virginia, Cycocigs.com in New Mexico, eSmokes in Florida and Cigoutlet.com
in Virginia.
"Even after we warned these guys how easy it was for minors to
purchase cigarettes, they continued operating as usual," Kaplan
said. "It was a real problem."
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control, nearly 28 percent
of California high school students used tobacco products as of 2000.
Meanwhile, the state Board of Equalization estimates cheap cigarettes online store that about $54
million in tax revenue was lost in the most recent fiscal year because
out-of-state tobacco merchants failed to report sales to California
officials.
The Internet, of course, accounts for a very small fraction of overall
cigarette sales, including among minors.
Emily Kaplan, 17, a student at Lincoln High School in cheap cigarettes online store San Francisco
(and no relation to the deputy attorney general), said most young people
know which stores will sell them smokes over the counter. "Also,
you can always ask someone older to buy them for you," she said.
Buying cigarettes online, Kaplan added, seems "way too complicated."
But the attorney general's office believes its lawsuit is cheap cigarettes online store important
because the number of kids willing to purchase tobacco via the Net will
only grow year after year.

All but one of the five companies to be sued today by cheap cigarettes online store California ignored
calls and e-mails seeking comment. The one that did respond, New Mexico's
Cycocigs, essentially argued that if kids are determined to smoke, there's
not much anyone can do to stop them.
"Look at marijuana," said Rick Urrea, the company's president.
"It's 100, 000 percent illegal and kids smoke it every day. They're
going to get it if they want it."
Nevertheless, he said he understands the concerns of cheap cigarettes online store California officials
and, as of two weeks ago, implemented a new policy requiring the signature
of an adult when shipments from Cycocigs arrive at the door.

"We've lost customers because of the inconvenience," Urrea
said. "But we don't want to sell to kids. That's not what we're
here for."
As for evading state taxes, he said Cycocigs will fight the cheap cigarettes online store charge.
The U.S.
Supreme Court ruled in 1992 that it's too great a burden for companies
to collect and remit taxes across state lines, and Urrea said this will
form the basis of his defense. But Kaplan at the attorney general's
office countered that the federal Jenkins Act still requires out-of-state
tobacco vendors to report all cigarette sales to local authorities.
"We think we have a cheap cigarettes online store good case," she said. "We feel good
about this."