Buy discount cigarettes
Discount cigarettes
sales
Online
discount cigarettes
Here discount cigarettes
Online sales of cigarettes could be costing states
millions of dollars in unpaid taxes, according to a new report.
Almost all states charge taxes on the sale of cigarettes, but the issue cheap cigarettes online store
has come to the fore as municipalities such as New York City and other
locales raise taxes to close budget gaps.

As with many other products, one of the attractions of purchasing cigarettes
online has been the avoidance of those taxes. A report from the General
Accounting Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress, pointed
to a cheap cigarettes online store Forrester Research study that predicts Internet tobacco sales in
the United States will exceed $5 billion in 2005 and the states will
lose about $1.4 billion in tax revenue from these sales.
But, as with sales taxes, although consumers aren't charged the excise
tax by the vendor when they purchase the item, they are still responsible
for remitting it to their home state. In the case of cigarettes, a 1949
federal law known as the Jenkins Act requires dealers who ship cigarettes
across state lines to people other than a licensed distributor to report
the sale to the buyer's home state, so that cheap cigarettes online store state can collect excise
tax.
Only 5 percent of the Internet retailers surveyed posted notices of
their responsibilities under the Jenkins Act, although those that did
stated that they didn't comply with it, according to the GAO. And many
Internet retailers even stated on their Web sites that they did not
have to comply with the Jenkins Act, 16 percent of these citing their
Native American status, the Internet Tax Freedom Act, cheap cigarettes online store and other laws
as reasons for not complying with the act.

"However, our review of the laws cited, as well as the Jenkins
cheap cigarettes online store Act and its legislative history, indicates that neither Native American
status nor any of the laws cited relieve Internet vendors of their Jenkins
Act responsibilities," the GAO report states.
Enforcement cheap cigarettes online store of the Jenkins Act is technically the purview of the Justice
Department and the FBI. However, prosecution has been limited. The GAO
found only three federal investigations involving such potential violations,
and none of these cheap cigarettes online store had resulted in prosecution.
"No Internet cigarette vendors had been penalized for violating
the act, nor had any penalties cheap cigarettes online store been sought for violators," the
report said.

To beef up enforcement, the GAO recommended that the cheap cigarettes online store Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), which currently has some jurisdiction to
enforce the Act, cheap cigarettes online store be given primary jurisdiction. That would also help
ease the FBI's burden as it tries to fight terrorism, the GAO report
said.
In addition, all of the agencies involved thought the act might be more
easily enforced if cheap cigarettes online store violations under it were upgraded to felonies from
misdemeanors.

The ATF is already working on ways to increase enforcement, the cheap cigarettes online store report
said, including asking tobacco manufacturers to help determine who is
selling cigarettes to Internet and mail order companies.
Some states are cheap cigarettes online store trying to enforce the Act on their own. Of the nine
states surveyed by the GAO, California had the most success in collecting
taxes, taking in about $1.4 million in between 1997 and 2001. But the
state received information from only 20 out of 167 online cigarette
retailers, and responses from 13,500 of the 23,500 residents subsequently
notified of their tax responsibilities.
"Officials in the nine states said that they lack the legal authority
to successfully address cheap cigarettes online store this problem on their own. They believe greater
federal action is needed, particularly because of their concern that
Internet cigarette sales will continue to increase with a growing and
substantial negative effect on tax revenues," the report said.