Va. crime panel examining cigarette trafficking

LARRY O’DELL, Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Cigarette  smuggling has become so lucrative that organized crime is getting involved, and  many former drug dealers have switched to peddling contraband smokes instead of  narcotics, the Virginia  State Crime Commission was told Wednesday.

The General  Assembly last winter directed the commission to study illegal cigarette  trafficking and make recommendations before the 2013 legislative session, which  begins in January. The commission’s staff conducted the investigation and will  present its recommendations at the next meeting in November.

G.  Stewart Petoe, the commission’s legal affairs director, said the amount of  money cigarette smugglers can make is staggering. That’s because they can buy a  pack of premium cigarettes for about $5.55 in Virginia and sell it for a big  profit on the black market in New York City, where a higher cigarette excise tax  pushes the retail price to about $14 a pack.

Smuggle enough cigarettes and  the payday can be enormous. Petoe said a federal Bureau  of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent estimated that a car can  carry 10 cases of cigarettes — there are 60 cartons in a case — with an  estimated profit of $34,000. Upgrade to a van, and 50 cases can turn a $170,000  profit. A large truckload can haul 800 cases and net a profit of  $4 million.

Petoe said he was stunned by a  Virginia State Police agent’s observation that bootlegged cigarettes now have a  higher profit margin than cocaine, heroin, marijuana or guns.

“It has just become irresistible  for organized crime, and when they come to Virginia, they will bring ancillary  violent crime with them,” Petoe said.

He added that drug dealers are  switching to smokes not only for the money, but also because they face less  prison time if they’re caught.

Petoe said cigarette smuggling  is booming because many states, particularly those north of Virginia, have  increased their cigarette excise taxes in recent years. Virginia — the nation’s  fifth-largest tobacco producer and home of its most prolific cigarette factory — has the country’s second-lowest tax: $3 per carton. The tax is $43.50 in New  York state and $58.50 in New York City.

According to Petoe, a recent  study found that 30 percent of all cigarettes in New York City came from out of  state — and of those, 71 percent were from Virginia.

“As the second-lowest tax state,  we’re setting ourselves up to be complicit,” said state Sen. Janet  Howell, D-Fairfax, who added that she wasn’t necessarily suggesting a  tax increase.

Petoe said one of the simplest  and fastest-growing methods of bootlegging is called “smurfing.” Individual  smugglers or small groups buy cartons of cigarettes at multiple locations  throughout the day, then haul them out of state for resale on the  black market.

Commission staff members  conducting the study hung out for a while at a convenience store off Interstate  95 in the Richmond area, Petoe said, and watched one customer get out of a car  and buy five cartons of cigarettes and return to the vehicle. Then another  person got out of the car and did the same thing.

“It’s very clear what they were  doing,” Petoe said.

Some cigarette traffickers  seeking to maximize their illicit gains have established bogus retail operations  so they can buy in bulk from wholesalers, Petoe said. He added that there are  myriad other schemes involving forged tax stamps, selling cigarettes “off the  books” to evade taxes, international smuggling and importing  counterfeit cigarettes.

“The ingenuity of criminals is  flabbergasting,” Petoe said.

The commission also began  examining whether the state needs to improve the process for gathering forensic  evidence from sexual assault victims who are incapable of giving consent for the  testing, but no recommendations were made.

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