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The lawsuits ask the court to enjoin the companies
from doing business in Oregon and asks for $25,000 in penalties, plus
attorney's fees.Attorney General Hardy Myers filed lawsuits against
three Internet tobacco sellers Tuesday after a sting in which a 14-year-old
received a carton from each of the three firms.The three companies are:
D.C. Inc. of Fenton, Mo., doing business as dirtcheapcig.com and Dirt
Cheap Cigarettes; Cyco.Net Inc. of Albuquerque, N.M.;
and eSmokes Inc. A quick google.com search, and one finds name brand
cartons of Newport Kings selling for $30.25 a carton, and Tahoe for
$14.99 at affordablecigs.com. United Parcel Service Ground shipping
costs an additional $6 for the first five cartons ordered, with an additional
cost of $1.20 for every additional carton.Higgins said few of her customers
have kicked the habit because of the cost increase.

We have drafted several changes that, if included,
could dramatically change our opinion. We are working proactively on
those changes.""Although the authors indicated that retailers'
concerns were addressed in this new bill, they fell short in several
areas and did not deal with some major points of contention at all,"
said Sam Turner, chairman of the NACS Government Relations Board Committee.
"Without changes to the DeWine-Kennedy bill, NACS will oppose this
legislation.It is NACS's opinion that the fundamental problems with
the Kennedy-DeWine bill are:It is not comprehensive. To be comprehensive,
all retailers of tobacco, including those selling over the Internet,
through the mail, through adult-only locations and on Indian reservations,
must abide by the same regulations. This bill does not do that. Further,
the bill does not specify how the law will be enforced (by state, local
or federal authorities), thereby neglecting the issue of Native sovereignty
and enforcement on tribal lands (to which all consumers have access
through the Internet).

It is unfair to responsible retailers. If a company
trains its associates in an agreed-upon age-verification course, that
company should not lose its tobacco license if a trained associate makes
a mistake (knowingly or accidentally). If the company is irresponsible
and does not prepare its associates properly, only then should the store
have its tobacco license suspended.There are no penalties for minors.
Attempted illegal transactions are initiated by minors, not retailers.
There should be adequate penalties to discourage both supply and demand
of underage tobacco consumption.In addition, according to NACS, this
legislation lacks provisions to allow for easier electronic age verification
for retailers choosing to use this tool. There are also advertising
restrictions, which could negatively impact signage inside a store since
it may be visible from outside the store.


"NACS is strictly concerned with the retailing
provisions in this legislation and until these provisions are fixed
appropriately, NACS will continue to fight against passage of this legislation,"
said Allison Shulman, NACS director of government affairs.
The recent 69 cents a pack state tax increase on cigarettes has smokers
changing their habit, but not the habit you might think.
"I'm not quitting, but I'm buying my cigarettes in Virginia where
I'm paying $8.50 a carton for these," says Kathy Demas, of Havertown,
as she pointed to a pack of generic cigarettes called Tahoe. "I
go there a lot to visit relatives, so I buy my cigarettes there now."
Though she doesn't sell the Tahoe brand, Lisa Higgins, manager of the
Wooden Indian Tobacco Shop in the Manoa Shopping Center, carries the
Doral generic brand, which she sells for $28.47 a carton, when on sale.
Cartons of brand name cigarettes in her shop sell for
$42.20. A single pack of name brand cigarettes is priced at $4.22, generics
go for $2.86 and imported cigarettes sell in her shop for about $5.90
a pack. Cigars and pipe tobacco were not affected by
the tax increase, but could be in the future, Higgins says.
Though Higgins says she has not seen a decrease in sales since the price
increased, she's heard a lot of people say they are going out of state
to Delaware to buy cigarettes at lower prices.
"I've heard people say they are ordering off the Internet too,"
Higgins tells.
It's completely legal to purchase cigarettes for personal use only through
the Internet. And it's doesn't take an Einstein to figure out the mathematical
advantages of doing so."I've heard them say, 'OK, that's it. I
draw the line on the price; I'm quitting,'" she says. "But
the majority of them don't go through with it and quit.""I've
noticed some people tried to switch to the cheaper generic brands, but
then they switch back because they like their old brand more."
Robert Gevjan of Prospect Park, said he still smokes as much as he's
ever smoked, but has switched to generics to save money.
"But if they (generics) get up to four dollars a pack, that will
probably make me want to quit," Gevjan speculates.Despite trying
to quit twice and failing, the 30-year smoker says it's his addiction
to nicotine that keeps him puffing away regardless of health and monetary
costs."I'm mad at the state because I don't think the new increases
by the state were explained or justified," Gevjan says.
The state cites rising health costs and an effort to deter teens from
smoking as reasons for the increase.Kevin Woodson of Broomall will not
compromise in any way when it comes to his smoking. He refuses to switch
from his Newports to a generic brand, nor will he slow down or quit
due to cost."Would I pay $10 a pack? Yes," he says adamantly.
A smoker of about a pack a day since 1968, when, he recalls, cigarettes
were 35 cents a pack, says he feels the government raises cigarette
taxes as a way of controlling people.
"I won't be forced to quit. I use my cigarettes as a crutch, as
something that calms my nerves. If I didn't have my cigarettes, I'd
be paying thousands of dollars for a psychologist," Woodson says
of his addiction.
In fact, health costs, not monetary costs are the only thing that would
make Woodson cut down or quit."If someone said to me that because
of smoking I have emphysema or lung cancer, then I would not smoke."
Woodson says he has friends who drive about a half hour to Delaware
to buy their cigarettes.James Facenda, 81, of Havertown,
is another long-time smoker who will pay whatever it takes to feed his
habit. "I don't want to stop smoking, and the price does not bother
me," Facenda says.
"I've been smoking since I was eight, and I used to pay a penny
a cigarette then. Now I don't even think about the price. My health
would have to be affected for me to quit."