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Senate Bill 504 requires mail-order cheap cigarettes online store companies to report the names of
their Indiana cigarette customers. The companies also have to either
pay the excise tax or advise the customer to pay.
Possession of more than 71/2 cartons of untaxed cigarettes is cheap cigarettes online store a misdemeanor
the first time and a felony on the second offense.
But so far, even though millions of packs of cigarettes are apparently
slipping by untaxed, not much has happened.

Why all the fuss over a tiny tax stamp on a cheap cigarettes online store pack of smokes? Those stamps
add up -- possibly to $60 million in taxes the state's missed out on.
The excise tax more than tripled last year. Since then, the sales of
taxed cigarettes have declined nearly 26 percent from a year earlier,
according to my review of monthly state reports. That adds up to cheap cigarettes online store the
millions in uncollected taxes.
Maybe people are smoking less because of the higher cost. More likely,
they're buying smokes in low-tax states like Kentucky or buying them
by mail-order to avoid Indiana taxes.
"I can't blame a customer for trying to save some money,"
said Vince DeFabis, an owner of Delaware News Company near the City-County
Building.
The newsstand is cheap cigarettes online store busy all day with people lined up for cigarettes, lottery
tickets, newspapers and magazines.
DeFabis said he had met only one person who cheap cigarettes online store bought untaxed cigarettes
by mail.
Still, mail-order sales, some placed through a growing list of Web sites,
are unfair to Indiana retailers, the sponsor of the new law says.
"We have the vendors of cigarettes here in the state who are collecting
the tax," said state Sen. Tim Lanane, D-Anderson. "And these
Internet sellers are trying to get around doing that."
Other people may just be driving to Kentucky where the tax on a pack
is 3 cents, instead of Indiana's 55.5-cent tax.
The Department of Revenue is trying to get the word out that people
can be prosecuted for cigarette smuggling.

Last week, the agency cheap cigarettes online store announced the arrest of a Louisville man, Yohannes
T. Tekle, on a charge of possession with intent to sell untaxed cigarettes
at his grocery store in nearby Clarksville, Ind.
The maximum penalty for a first offense, the revenue department announced
ominously, is a year in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Tekle hasn't gone to court yet, but two things might suggest that cheap cigarettes online store we're
not exactly putting the fear of the Lord into cigarette smugglers.

First, though millions of packs of untaxed cheap cigarettes online store cigarettes are falling through
the cracks, only two people have been busted.
Second, look at the penalty in the only case to settle so far.
The Department of Revenue says authorities "recovered a large quantity
of (untaxed) cigarettes" last fall from a store run by Clyde R.
Johnson, 68, Veedersburg.
If you want to discourage smuggling, you might make the cheap cigarettes online store penalty harsher
than, say, a traffic ticket.
The standard ticket for speeding in Marion County is $110.
And Johnson's fine? Just $100.
Jersey lawmakers seek tax on internet cigarettes
FEBRUARY 09, 2004 -- TRENTON, N.J. -- Heading cheap cigarettes online store into
their fourth consecutive year of grappling with multi-billion-dollar
budget deficits, state lawmakers are looking for a way to tax Internet
cigarette sales, according to the Trenton Bureau.
Currently, smokers are forced to ante up a $2.05 excise
tax on each pack of cigarettes sold in New Jersey. But with that levy
raised in each of the last two years, Internet sales have cropped up
as a way to cheap cigarettes online store avoid government collectors.
Excise taxes on cigarettes alone are expected to reach
$790 million this year, the state Treasury Department said.
"We're trying to do two things here. We're making
sure underage kids are not buying cigarettes and also to protect legitimate
cigarette sellers in New Jersey," said Assemblywoman Loretta Weinberg
(D-Bergen), who is spearheading the effort. "I think there is a
growing problem."
The Assembly Appropriations Committee cheap cigarettes online store on Monday is
expected to start deliberations on the measure, which is similar to
legislation pending or enacted in 13 states around the nation.
Sen. Leonard Lance (R-Hunterdon/Warren) told the Trenton
Bureau he has not seen the bill but is anxious to have it appear before
the Senate Budget Committee.

At an estimated 500 sites, a 10-pack carton of cigarettes
will sell for just $30 per carton online, while the same brand can cost
upwards of $55 in stores, according to the news source.
State officials have no estimate of how much tax money
is lost. But sponsors maintain Internet tobacco sales will cost the
50 states a collective $1.4 billion in 2005, a year in which New Jersey
is projected to face a $4-billion shortfall.
"It's substantial," Treasury Department spokesman
Tom Vincz said of the money, adding his agency has yet to rule on the
bill. "We are generally supportive of any initiative that will
help us enforce an excise tax."
The Jenkins Act also places the onus on buyers to pay
appropriate taxes, not sellers.
This loophole allows re-importers, offshore firms buying
American cigarettes tax-free, cheap cigarettes online store to ship them back into the country without
reflecting the excise taxes in the price charged to consumers. Weinberg's
legislation would order the online brokers to furnish the state with
lists of those to whom they sell, reported the news source.

Left unclear is the legislation's effect on sales originating
in American Indian reservations.
"It's only going to continue to grow. And the
only way we're going to cheap cigarettes online store start to really address any illegal actions
is by passing comprehensive legislation," said Jamie Drogin, a
spokeswoman for tobacco giant Philip Morris U.S.A. "Online cigarette
sales have grown as the prices have risen. What the adult smokers have
done is that they've sought out lower prices in illegal venues."