Tag: black market

  • Gay: Rules Must Change for Seized Illicit Vapor Products

    Gay: Rules Must Change for Seized Illicit Vapor Products

    Credit: Innovated Captures

    By George Gay

    In the recent past, three stories have come to my notice that have recorded how vaping products have been seized by various authorities: in Hong Kong, where such products are banned; in Australia, where they are prescription devices; and in the U.K., where they are freely available. In Western Australia (WA), the ABC reported, WA Health recently seized 950 e-cigarettes, bringing the total seized for three years to about 16,000 “nicotine vaping products.”

    In Hong Kong, the HKFP reported, about 360,000 products had been seized since the implementation on April 30 of a ban on alternative smoking products including e-cigarettes. And in the City of Westminster (population an estimated 250,000), the U.K. Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA) reported, 4,500 disposable vapes were seized because they did not conform to local standards along with 420 counterfeit vapes and 2,366 snus products “with no English labeling.”

    The three stories were different, but they had one thing in common: None of them indicated what became, or what was to become, of the seized products, and I find this extraordinary and worrying, especially given that the three stories cited are probably the tip of the worldwide seizure iceberg.

    We are deeply into a global existential crisis caused by, among other things, climate change and pollution, so you might imagine that the first questions to come up would concern, among others, the carbon footprint of the manufacturing processes that produced the seized products, and how we can prevent these products, which will include batteries, from ending up in landfills.

    It would be hugely damaging if the products seized in the U.K. were just disposed of, even if they were recycled, but in Australia and Hong Kong, where, respectively, a ridiculous restriction and a ludicrous ban are in operation, disposal would simply heap one act of stupidity on top of another.

    If no such mechanism exists already, a way should be found to allow seized products to be diverted from markets where, for one reason or another, they have arrived but are unacceptable to other markets where they are acceptable. This, admittedly, would prove difficult, though not impossible, where counterfeit products were concerned, but otherwise should not be beyond the wit of those skilled in marketing and distribution.

    For instance, products seized in Hong Kong could be sent to countries that don’t ban them and where they comply with domestic standards, keeping the carbon footprint of the shipping as low as possible and selling them at the cost of the shipping to local suppliers to compensate for any market displacements.

    Credit: Earnest Tse

    A similar scheme could be applied to the disposal of vapes seized in the U.K., which apparently had “excessive levels of nicotine.” They could be shipped to someplace where such restrictions are not in place, once again keeping the carbon footprint of the shipping as low as possible and selling the products at the cost of shipping to local suppliers to compensate for any market displacements. Otherwise, in this case, simply change the rules.

    As far as I am aware, nicotine-level restrictions are usually based on arbitrary figures devised by bureaucrats who have never smoked or vaped and whose scientific advisers probably couldn’t justify such restrictions on a rational basis. I think I am right in saying that the EU imposes delivery limits on traditional cigarettes while, at the same time, denying that there are any health benefits in doing so. In fact, probably the only significant effect of imposing such delivery limits is to make it easier for young people to start smoking.

    In the past, policies based on irrational ideas were frustrating; now, faced with a mounting existential crisis, we simply cannot afford to allow rank stupidity to prevail because, applied on a wider basis, as they are, such policies are driving the planet further and further down the tubes.

    In my view, it is time to face the facts, but I’m not sure that everyone agrees. As part of the UKVIA story, Raj Mistry, executive director of environment and city management at Westminster City Council, was quoted as saying the raid that uncovered the illicit goods showed the local authority’s commitment to keeping Westminster clean and safe.

    “We are putting these questionable traders on notice that they will not be tolerated in our city,” he said in part. “We’ll continue to take action against such unsafe trading activities in order to keep our residents and visitors safe.”

    This emphasis on clean and safe makes nice newspaper copy, but it is a bit misleading. As far as I can see, none of the seized vaping products could be seen as being unclean, whatever that might mean, and there was no suggestion that either the off-standard or counterfeit products were unsafe, though that couldn’t be ruled out in the case of the latter.

    Credit: Adobe Stock

    On the other hand, London, of which the City of Westminster is a part, is certainly not clean or safe because air pollution throughout the capital is a huge public health issue, causing the premature deaths of thousands of people each year.

    In fairness, I should point out that Mistry’s comments would have concerned all of the illicit products discovered in the raid that uncovered the tobacco and nicotine products, which included, as well as the tobacco and nicotine products already mentioned, counterfeit mobile phone covers, counterfeit Apple AirPods, counterfeit Sony PS4 consoles, USB chargers with no safety labeling and unlabeled packs of shisha tobacco. Even so, the potential safety problems raised by all of these products would be infinitesimal compared with those associated with pollution, which is where I would concentrate my efforts if I really wanted to keep things clean and safe.

    I wrote the above just ahead of the arrival on May 31 of the World Health Organization’s World No Tobacco Day (WNTD). Normally, I pay no attention to this annual event, which I have always assumed is observed only by those who have no positive interaction with tobacco during the rest of the year as well. But this year, something has changed.

    This year, it seems to have come to the WHO’s attention that it is supposed to be a body concerned with health issues that cannot, like smoking, be dealt with at a national level— issues, such as those to do with pandemics, that don’t observe borders. So, this year, the theme of its WNTD is “Tobacco: Threat to our environment.”

    To my way of thinking, this represents a smart move and a good move. It is a good move, I believe, because it pushes at the door of reality. It doesn’t say so, but it offers the slightest of hints that the biggest threat to the health of the world isn’t tobacco or smoking but environmental collapse. At the same time, it is a smart move from the point of view of those implacably opposed to tobacco because it helps to underline the growing alignment between health and environmental activists.

    The tobacco and nicotine industry needs to be aware of this alignment and to take action wherever it can to ameliorate the negative effects it is having on the environment, and, wherever possible, to publicize what it is doing. It needs to do this because of the historical problems it has created through its lack of significant action in respect of such issues as deforestation and the careless disposal of cigarette butts and in respect of the more contemporary problems associated with e-cigarettes and some other lower risk products. And there should be no greenwashing. The industry should address these matters because it is the right thing to do, and it possibly needs to address them if it wants to keep on operating.

    Credit: Kulichok

    Ahead of WNTD, Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) in the U.S. issued a report titled “Tobacco and the environment: Case studies on policies to protect our environment and our health from tobacco.” As the title suggests, the report looks at how, in ASH’s view, the tobacco industry passes to society in general the health and environmental costs it creates. And it talks up possible remedies, such as that based on the “polluter pays” principle and the application of extended producer responsibility, and even the shuttering of the industry through policies such as those concerned with what is known as the tobacco endgame.

    Much of the report is based on the problems caused by traditional tobacco production and consumption, but e-cigarettes are included. “From mining to manufacturing, using and disposing, each stage of the e-cigarette product lifecycle presents novel environmental harms compared with traditional cigarettes,” the report says in part, quoting the American Public Health Association. “Tobacco companies already recognize that e-cigarettes pose new environmental burdens, necessitating them to manage new areas of impact due to the increasing use of electronics and batteries in [their] products.”

    I don’t agree with all aspects of the report, but it is impossible, in my view, to disagree with the underlying message that the industry has a duty to act decisively to greatly reduce the impact it has on the environment—a duty that, as far as I can see, supersedes any other duty that it might have.

    But let’s return to the Australia story and what might turn out to be a more positive outcome than is suggested by the seizures in WA. The story gets off to a depressing start with a WA Health spokesperson, Michael Lindsay, saying e-cigarettes are a major concern for health officials.

    “It’s very uncontrolled; the sorts of things that have been found in e-cigarettes include heavy metals and volatile organic compounds,” he was quoted as saying. “Several of these chemicals are known to cause damage to human cells and DNA and cause cancer. These are not chemicals that people should be breathing in or inhaling, and it’s really important that they are removed from the marketplace to protect public health.”

    Readers of this magazine will not be surprised that Lindsay did not mention that e-cigarettes were used largely by people as a low-risk substitute for high-risk traditional cigarettes or that he made no mention of pollution. But there is hope because a recent federal election in Australia saw a change of government. “Unfortunately, the outgoing Health Minister Greg Hunt was a fierce opponent of vaping, and let’s hope future health ministers are much more sensible and rational,” said a director of the Australian Tobacco Harm Reduction Association, Alex Wodak.

    Earlier in the piece, Wodak was quoted as saying that in Australia, e-cigarettes were disproportionately regulated compared to traditional cigarettes. “We know that the overwhelming majority of people who vape in Australia are current smokers or, even more so, former smokers, and they’re doing it to reduce the harm from smoking,” he said.

    “We’re trying to enforce laws which are really stupid.”

    Amen to that.

    This article first appeared in Vapor Voice 3, 2022.

  • Twelve Held as Mumbai Police Crackdown on Vapes

    Twelve Held as Mumbai Police Crackdown on Vapes

    Credit: Andriano_cz

    The CB Control unit of the Mumbai Police on Thursday conducted simultaneous raids at 11 locations in Mumbai, arresting 12 e-cigarette vendors and seizing illegal vaping products contraband worth over  Rs 14 lakh ($17,000).

    According to CB Control officers, the raids were the culmination of an eight-day-long operation, during which information about people illegally selling e-cigarettes was collected and verified. E-cigarettes are banned for sale, purchase and use in India under the Prohibition of Electronic Cigarettes Act 2019.

    Police also contacted an online vendor through a dummy customer and placed an order for 100 e-cigarettes, asking him to come to Nagpada with the goods. As soon as he showed up, the call went out and all the other markets were raided at the same time.

    “We seized a total of 2030 e-cigarettes worth Rs 14.60 lakh, along with 963 boxes of scented tobacco and 53 bottles of refilling liquid. Three of the shops we raided were also selling e-cigarettes to minors when we conducted the raids. They were additionally charged Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act,” Patil said.

  • Geek Bar Develops ‘Supply Chain Charter’ to Combat Fakes

    Geek Bar Develops ‘Supply Chain Charter’ to Combat Fakes

    Geek Bar launched its new “supply chain charter’ as part of a crackdown on “rising levels of malpractice across the distribution and retail of disposable vape products.”

    The charter covers “every aspect of the supply chain,” the company said, from product sourcing to sale of devices to customers. The company has been working to crack down on “the challenge of illicit disposable vape products finding their way into the country” it said.

    Late last year, over-strength Geek Bar products were found to be openly sold online in an investigation by the UK Vaping Industry Association (UKVIA). In the UK, regulations state that disposable vapes should contain no more than 20mg/ml of nicotine nor have above 2ml liquid capacity.

    Geek Bar Pros, manufactured for markets where regulations are different and allow higher nicotine concentrations, have been amongst the non-compliant products finding their way into the UK market, according to The Grocer.

    The brand has also been involved in closing 12 counterfeit factories in China which had manufactured more than 100,000 counterfeit Geek Bars destined for the UK.

    “We have been working tirelessly over the last six months to review our business operations to ensure that no stone has been left unturned and ensure adult smokers continue to enjoy the highest quality and safest vaping experience when using our products,” said Allen Yang, CEO at Geek Bar.

    “We will not tolerate malpractice amongst distributors and retailers who want to supply and sell our products but do not do it legitimately. Through the development of the charter we are upping the ante even more to ensure rogue traders do not succeed in our marketplace,” he added.

    The charter commits the company and its supply chain partners to various measures, including more stringent batch control, clearer distribution contracts, product authenticity checks for retailers and consumers, tamper-proof packaging and faster product recall procedures.

    “The charter is designed to set the bar very high when it comes to disposable vape standards in the supply chain. These standards have been under scrutiny in recent months as the category has attracted significant interest and demand,” Yang said.

    The sector has been making efforts to curb non-regulation and counterfeit products finding their way onto the UK market, as well as tackling underage sales.

  • GeekVape Wants More Action on Counterfeit Vape Products

    GeekVape Wants More Action on Counterfeit Vape Products

    Vape manufacturer GeekVape, the parent of Geek Bar, has written to trading standards departments in major UK cities asking them to take more action to combat the growing market for illicit vaping products.

    GeekVape previously established a primary authority partnership with Oldham Council to focus on the growing issue surrounding illicit disposable products, according to Talking Retail. It has now followed this up by approaching other trading standards departments requesting their commitment to do all they can do to cut off the supply of non-compliant and counterfeit disposables.

    Allen Yang, CEO of GeekVape, said it was easy to blame the manufacturer, but the truth is that illicit products are finding their way into the UK through customs and being sold in retail outlets across the country.

    “It’s a huge issue for our own reputation and the vape sector as a whole,” Yang said. “Enough is enough, and there needs to be more collaboration and enforcement involving all parties including trading standards, the vaping industry, trade associations representing retailers and the medicines and healthcare products regulatory agency.”

    The company has been working closely with the authorities in China to identify factories producing fake products. This has resulted in the closure of 12 counterfeit production facilities and the seizure of more than 100,000 fake products destined for the UK.

  • Lincoln, Neb. Vape Shop Crime a Growing Concern

    Lincoln, Neb. Vape Shop Crime a Growing Concern

    Credit: Global Image Archive

    Update: The Lincoln Police Department is investigating a break-in at another vape shop on Tuesday. LPD said officers were dispatched to an alarm and responding officers found a glass door was shattered and the suspects got inside the business, according to news reports.

    Lincoln, Nebraska has a problem with burglaries at vape shops. This weekend, employees at another Lincoln smoke shop arrived to work to find the front door shattered and thousands of dollars in vape products stolen.

    On Saturday at 10:30 a.m., Lincoln police were called to SJ’s Smoke Shop near 31st and O Streets after employees reported the front glass door shattered, according to news reports.

    Surveillance video shows two people using a rock to break the front door. LPD says they took multiple pipes and vape products worth roughly $5,000. The damage to the building is also estimated at $5,000.

    During an editorial on the rise in vape shop crime by Vapor Voice, Lincoln, Nebraska stood out as having a high number of vape shop crimes. Research suggests that in 2021 more than 40 vape shops burglaries occurred in Lincoln.

    A spokesperson for LPD said that vape shops often carry expensive products that are small and hard to trace. This makes vape shops, especially those carrying delta-8, CBD and other cannabis products, high value targets for criminals. The products are in high demand on the black market, LPD said.

    Richard Marianos, a senior law enforcement consultant and adjunct lecturer at Georgetown University, says regulatory constraints often have the unintended consequence of boosting crime rates, adding that taxes and flavor bans bring prohibition, and prohibition brings crime.

    “These regulatory actions mean a dramatic increase in street sales to kids, and that is what we have seen all over the United States,” said Marianos. “In terms of law enforcement, the issue is that there has been 150 percent increase in smash-and-grabs because of the difficulty of purchasing these products.”

  • Massachusetts Reports Rise in Illicit E-Cig Smuggling

    Massachusetts Reports Rise in Illicit E-Cig Smuggling

    Massachusetts law enforcement officials have reported seizing a sizable amount of banned and untaxed vaping products linked to cross-border smuggling last year. According to a new report by the Multi-Agency Illegal Tobacco Task Force, more than 213,000 electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) products were seized by state police and members of the task force in 2021.

    “Inspectors and investigators are routinely encountering or seizing menthol cigarettes, originally purchased in surrounding states, and flavored electronic nicotine delivery products and cigars purchased from unlicensed distributors operating both within and outside the commonwealth,” the report states.

    The seizures of vaping products dwarfed those of untaxed cigarettes, cigars and smokeless tobacco products by law enforcement agencies, according to news reports. Massachusetts banned the sale of flavored cigarettes and vaping products more than two years ago, but those products are still getting into the state through the blackmarket. The law imposed a 75 percent excise tax the wholesale cost of vaping products.

    Credit: Yurii Kibalnik

    The task force, which is overseen by the Department of Revenue, has partnered with federal officials to dismantle major cross-border smuggling operations and recover millions of dollars in unpaid tobacco and vaping product excise taxes. Under the new law, anyone caught bringing untaxed e-cigarettes or vaping products into the state can be fined $5,000 for a first offense and up to $25,000 for multiple violations.

    The provisions also allow police to seize untaxed vaping products as well as vehicles, boats and airplanes. The state collected more than $370 million in cigarette taxes alone in its last budget year, a 23 percent decline over the previous fiscal year, according to the Department of Revenue. The stae collected more than $13 million in taxes on vaping products.

    While many anti-nicotine groups have praised Massachusetts’ ban of flavored tobacco products, the ban is not the success its proponents make it out to be, according to Ulrik Boesen of the Tax Foundation. While a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine found that the sale of flavored tobacco in Massachusetts decreased more than in 27 control states in the wake of the state ban, the authors failed to consider the impact of cross-border trade.

    According to Boesen, increased sales in neighboring New Hampshire and Rhode Island almost completely made up for the decrease in Massachusetts. “The end result of the ban, in fact, is that Massachusetts is stuck with the societal costs associated with consumption, while the revenue from taxing flavored tobacco products is being raised in neighboring states,” Boesen wrote on the Tax Foundation’s website.

  • Unintended Consequences

    Unintended Consequences

    The number of crimes committed at specialty retail outlets has grown dramatically over the past few years.

    By Timothy S. Donahue

    Every year, hundreds if not thousands of cannabis dispensaries, vape shops and tobacco outlets are robbed or burglarized in the U.S. On July 10, in Lincoln, Nebraska, between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m., the police department responded to alarms at two vape shops where officers found shattered storefront glass at both locations. The thieves targeted CBD (cannabidiol) and Delta-8 THC (tetrahydrocannabinol) products. The pair of break-ins happened two days after another similar burglary, totaling three in as many days. The businesses lost tens of thousands of dollars in merchandise.

    Timothy Goodman, a manager at the Lincoln Vapor location, said that break-in was just the latest in a string of six incidents in approximately the last two years, according to news reports. Goodman, who has worked at Lincoln Vapor for nearly four years, said it’s his understanding that every break-in can be linked back to the same group.

    The burglars stole $2,000–$3,000 worth of merchandise in May 2021 and have lifted around $16,000 in products from the business through the last year and a half, according to Goodman. Most products were hardware and cannabis products, such as CBD and Delta-8 THC. “It’s frustrating beyond belief,” he said. “I wake up most nights in the middle of the night and check the cameras to make sure nobody got in.”

    The rise in vape shop crimes may be an unintended consequence of recent regulatory actions, such as tax increases, flavor bans and raising the age to purchase vaping and tobacco products to 21, according to many industry experts. Richard Marianos, a senior law enforcement consultant who has served more than 27 years at the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and who is now a consultant and adjunct lecturer at Georgetown University, says crime is often an unintended and overlooked consequence of regulatory constraints on the marketplace that encourage the growth of black markets.

    Credit: Lexington Police Dept.

    Marianos said that taxes and flavor bans bring prohibition, and prohibition brings crime. “These regulatory actions mean a dramatic increase in street sales to kids, and that is what we have seen all over the United States,” said Marianos. “If you have any form of tobacco harm reduction in your state, just throw that completely out the window [if you are going to implement flavor bans and raise taxes exorbitantly] because it forces young adults and people who can’t afford these products into a growing black market. In terms of law enforcement, the issue is that there has been 150 percent increase in smash-and-grabs because of the difficulty of purchasing these products.”

    Sam Salaymeh, president and CEO of AMV Holdings, parent to a chain of 113 Kure CBD & Vape shops across the U.S., said that his stores have seen a major increase in crime over the past two years. During Covid-19 lockdowns in 2020 through early 2021, AMV stores had over 20 burglaries combined. “There is a myriad of stories that come with these break-ins, but the main theme is criminals are trying to get to high-value items that are small in size—and that would be the CBD/cannabis products … etc.,” explains Salaymeh. “This is happening more and more across the country.”

    Credit: Manatee County Sheriffs Office

    During a one-hour period on Dec. 20, five separate retail locations—three vape shops and two tobacco/vape outlets—suffered a string of robberies by three men wearing masks that crossed the Southeast region of Los Angeles County. A shop owner said the criminals pretended to be customers when one pulled a gun and demanded money while two others snatched merchandise from the store’s shelves, according to news reports.

    Credit: UK Vapers

    “We now have organized crews that go out and hit multiple stores like convenience stores, gas stations, vape shops in a single night or a weekend … they don’t go for cash registers; they want the tobacco products because they can sell it on the street cheaper than what it’s being sold for with these high taxes and these prohibitions,” says Marianos. “They’re making a fortune in the black market the same way the dope dealers are selling cocaine and heroin because the taxes on vaping and tobacco products are going through the roof.”

    Crimes of convenience 

    In 2020, there were 102,677 robbery incidents and 102,677 offenses reported in the U.S. by 9,991 law enforcement agencies that submitted National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) data. Nearly 25 percent of those incidents were committed at convenience stores (13,721), gas stations (7,006) and specialty stores, where vape shops are lumped into (5,372) combined. If criminals are looking for quick cash, then robbing convenience stores or small specialty retail shops is one of the best ways to do it, according to the FBI.

    John Cavanaugh, owner of California-based Vaping Industries, says that thieves have broken into his stores numerous times. Typically, thieves try to take what’s immediately available. “They broke in after hours … broke the glass, popped open the register, grabbed the cash, broke into my office, got the petty cash and then rolled out,” he said. “I think we are starting to see more robberies than burglaries lately, and I think that it’s an easier target to hit a vape shop or a smoke shop with guns because the layout is small, there’s only typically one or two employees and—especially with cannabis dispensaries—there’s a lot of cash on hand.”

    Burglary
    Robbery

     

    The terms “burglary” and “robbery” are not interchangeable.

    They have meaningful differences.

    Burglary involves a person illegally entering a building to commit a crime while inside.

    Robbery is typically when someone takes something of value directly from another person using force or fear.

    There is a far greater chance that someone committing a robbery will do so armed compared to burglaries, which typically occur after hours.

    Convenience stores accounted for nearly 13 percent of all violent crimes suffered in 2020, and gas stations accounted for about 12 percent.

    Across North America, crimes involving vapor, tobacco or cannabis shops are getting more violent. On Dec. 3, in Calgary, Canada, officials said a “number of people” entered Jerry’s Smoke and Vape just after 6:30 p.m. According to a police report, one of the suspects pointed a gun at the clerk, and the bandits made off with cash and merchandise.

    On Sept. 12, in British Columbia, a suspect entered a vape shop alone armed with a shotgun. After threatening an employee, the suspect took an undisclosed amount of cash and product before escaping on foot. Over the weekend of May 29 to June 1, 2020, thieves burglarized several cannabis dispensaries, distribution centers and cultivation in Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco and other cities, stealing legal commercial cannabis products and cash. On Sept. 11, 2021, in Calgary, Canada, three masked men entered a dispensary armed, held off staff and got away with a quantity of cannabis products.

    Cavanaugh said robberies are more common at cannabis dispensaries than vape shops because cannabis dispensaries have a lot of cash on hand, especially in the U.S. where very few banks will work with marijuana businesses. There are also numerous illegal cannabis dispensaries, which perpetrators know are less likely to notify law enforcement.

    “Before all of this started happening over the last few years, I didn’t really believe in upping my security. Now, I have to make sure that there are panic buttons, that my staff are properly trained for when somebody comes in with guns blazing,” he says. “They need to know to just give it all up. Give them the cash and whatever they want. It’s OK. It isn’t worth your life. I’m also now spending extra money for high-end security cameras and security systems. It’s frustrating.”

    Crime prevention

    According to Marianos, there are several reasons why thieves target convenience stores and gas stations and now vape shops and dispensaries: operating hours and low numbers of staff on site, and these types of stores have smaller layouts, so it’s easier to find the expensive/high demand products and there is the potential for large amounts of cash on-site.

    “You don’t want it to make product accessible where somebody can just take a trash can, throw it through the window and get into your shop and take all your stuff,” says Marianos. “More cameras, limiting the amount of people that are coming in like they do at jewelry stores—these businesses need a similar model that retailers with high-end products have. In some higher crime areas, you may even have to hire a security guard.”

    Vandalism, from smash-and-grab types of crimes, has occurred so often at AMV stores in recent years that Salaymeh says he has a toolkit in his garage ready to go at a moment’s notice with everything needed to board up a store. He says he involuntarily became an expert at it. Salaymeh says that while it is rare for AMV stores to alter operating hours, it is a tactic they have used in the past. He says that having at least two staff members at all times in some locations, installing security cameras and other security measures are the primary tools store owners have in their arsenal to help deter crime.

    “Security cameras help us at least get the story behind what happened and potentially pictures of the thieves. We also try to limit the access potential thieves have to valuable product … and we’ve tried to keep the lights on after hours so that people can actually see that these products aren’t lying around or in display cases,” he says. “We leave the register drawer open so that people, when they walk up, they see there’s no cash.”

    Another unintended consequence of overzealous taxation and regulation is the impact it has on local law enforcement, according to Marianos. He says enacting some of these rules are, in effect, giving police more work to do in terms of harassment violations that have no teeth instead of fighting real crime.

    “Instead of being able to work on what they should be working on—to serve and protect—are we going to be calling the police because someone is vaping a flavor?” he asks. “What is law enforcement going to do with all this nonsense? What are they going to charge the guy with? What is the crime? Do you know what I mean? It becomes an hour and a half just sitting around trying to figure out what we’re going to do here.”

    During his interview with Vapor Voice, Salaymeh’s phone rang. It was the security firm ADT. One of the Kure stores had an alarm going off. He said it happens multiple times a week. There is insurance available for specialty shops, but both Cavanaugh and Salaymeh say it is expensive. The deductible is often higher than the amount of damage suffered during a crime. Both say they rarely, if ever, claim any damages with their insurance companies.

    Credit: Tulsa Police

    Another overlooked result of rising crimes in these specialty sectors is the impact on the economy and the lives of employees. Cavanaugh said that crime has forced him to shutter two stores, and he now struggles to keep the doors open in his remaining location. Increases in crime, overregulation and misinformation concerning the health and safety of vaping, and the causes (illegal THC vaping products) of e-cigarette or vaping use-associated lung injury have been too much to bear.

    “We are doing our best to deal with the reality of today’s vaping industry,” Cavanaugh said. “I want to keep my doors open, and people depend on us; that’s important.”

    Salaymeh says he had to close some stores during the Covid-19 pandemic, some of which were temporary. The closures weren’t all crime-related, he explains, but most of them were. There was a period when stores were not allowed to be open, so burglaries were happening, and stores couldn’t sell anything to try to recover losses. “We’re trying to keep people employed. The height of the pandemic was a very, very, very difficult time for our company and many companies like us. The primary victims of these senseless crimes are the people who don’t have a job to go back to because I shut down 18 stores during that time,” he says. “Think about that.” 

  • Australia: More than $2 Million Worth of Vape Pens Seized

    Australia: More than $2 Million Worth of Vape Pens Seized

    Credit: Belyay

    Australian authorities have seized tens of thousands of nicotine vapes illegally being sold in the country over the past 18 months. Between July 2020 and December 2021, the New South Wales Department of Health seized more than 100,000 illegal vaping products, with a street value of more than $2 million.

    Since October, Australian vapers have been required to obtain a doctor’s prescription for nicotine-containing e-cigarettes and liquids. Doctors are supposed to prescribe the products only as a last resort when more proven quit treatments fail. The law changes were prompted by concerns about the health impacts of vaping, and data showing children are increasingly using the products.

    Over the past year, local public health units had been springing convenience stores, petrol stations and tobacconists who were selling vapes to children, enlisting undercover teenagers to attempt to purchase the products, according to news reports.

    Consumers who fail to include a nicotine prescription with their order will be subject to a fine of up to $222,000. The new system will work if enough doctors, pharmacists, smokers and vapers are willing to comply and are provided with sufficient information.

  • Inquiry Shows Extent of Illicit Vapor Market in Liverpool

    Inquiry Shows Extent of Illicit Vapor Market in Liverpool

    An inquiry into the extent of the illicit vaping and e-cigarette products market has revealed the scale of Liverpool, England’s growing black market. City council trading standards officers found large numbers of retailers in the city selling illegal vaping products.

    Credit: SYCprod

    Vaping devices are highly regulated by the government to control the amount of nicotine available and have to be approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA), according to a story in Liverpool’s Echo newspaper. The devices should contain no more than 2 percent nicotine or hold more than two millilitres of liquid, equivalent to 600 puffs or a packet of cigarettes.

    However, in a recent test purchasing exercise across the city to check on compliance, officers were able to buy illegal products at 74 retailers – some containing up to 3,500 puffs, almost six times above the legal limit. Now council is offering the retail trade the opportunity to contact Trading Standards for advice on their products with the proviso that compliance visits will be carried out in the New Year and any illegal products still on sale will be seized.

    The council have also been receiving a large number of complaints over the sale of these products to children and is asking parents with information and evidence to contact them. Councilor Abdul Qadir, cabinet member for Neighborhoods, said: “E-cigarettes and vaping products are seen by many people as a way of giving up smoking.”

  • UK Retailers Being Warned About Illegal E-Cigarettes

    UK Retailers Being Warned About Illegal E-Cigarettes

    The UK government officials are warning e-cigarette and vaping retailers after trading officers discover a large number of illegal products. Vaping devices are highly regulated by the government to control the amount of nicotine available and have to be approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

    “They should contain no more than 2 per cent nicotine or hold more than two mL of liquid, equivalent to 600 puffs or a packet of cigarettes, according to a news report. “However, in a recent test purchasing exercise across the city to check on compliance, officers were able to buy illegal products at 74 retailers – some containing up to 3,500 puffs, almost six times above the legal limit.”

    Officials are now offering retailers the opportunity to contact Trading Standards for advice on their products with the proviso that compliance visits will be carried out in the New Year and any illegal products still on sale will be seized. The council have also been receiving a large number of complaints over the sale of these products to children and is asking parents with information and evidence to contact them.

    More information and an online form is available at https://liverpool.gov.uk/business/trading-standards/alcohol-and-tobacco-illegal-trading/ or you can email trading.standards@liverpool.gov.uk