Tobacco: Crime’s new currency

From: The Daily Caller

Thomas Lesnak, Former ATF Agent

It may shock you to know that smuggled cigarettes command the same net profit  as heroin, and that in dozens of recent government investigations, crooks traded  everything from guns, drugs, counterfeit pharmaceuticals and stolen vehicles — including Lamborghinis — for cigarettes. Cigarette trafficking in America has  reached epidemic levels, because even in limited quantities cigarettes are worth  more than narcotics, and carry less risk of prosecution or meeting a violent  death. Most shocking of all, it is our well-intended tobacco control policies  that created — and continue to fuel — this vast criminal industry.

I write as a recently retired member of the U.S. Department of Justice,  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). As a Senior Special  Agent, I have over 25 years of worldwide investigative experience. Many of the  investigations in which I participated involved looking into the smuggling of  contraband, including narcotics, tobacco, money, and counterfeit goods, as well  as illegal production and distribution of tobacco products and the  financing of criminal organizations and corrupt governments. Not surprisingly,  these are all related.

$10 billion. That is the widely accepted figure our government estimates is  lost each year from tobacco trafficking schemes. With few federal resources  dedicated to stop this fraud, the U.S. taxpayer continues to foot the bill. The  money that should be going into state coffers via taxes is instead going to  criminals, some with ties to terrorists, drug cartels, and violent street  gangs.

Current law enforcement resources are woefully insufficient to handle the  problem, and we are experiencing an exponential increase in tobacco-related  criminal activity. Within the law enforcement community the culprit is obvious,  and it’s not the criminals. It’s well-intentioned, but ill-advised public  policy. No better example exists than New York City, where the most stringent  tobacco controls in the nation are being considered with an eye toward further  tightening.

To ignore the correlation between current tobacco policy trends – aggressive  tax increases, minimum price regulations, display bans – and increased crime is  to ignore the obvious. Policy makers are fooling themselves. They aren’t fooling  those in law enforcement.

Investigations into unlicensed manufacturers and cigarette-diverters have  documented time and again that bad guys celebrate tax increases; they don’t pay  the taxes now, and each tax hike means the obscene profit margin they already  enjoy over legitimate manufacturers and retailers just increases by a  commensurate amount.

When politicians say that increasing taxes lowers smoking rates, what they  aren’t saying is that higher costs have driven a large percentage of the market – disproportionately youth smokers – to illicit cigarettes. Millions of New  Yorkers now reside within a short walk or a cab-ride from smoke shops that sell  200 cigarettes in plain plastic bags for $10. Referred to as “rollies” or “baggies,” they feature no health warnings, and produce no tax revenue.

The law of diminishing returns applies to prohibitive tobacco rules and  regulations – a specific point at which the unintended consequences far  outweigh any incremental gains one may achieve by simply piling on new  regulations. New York City has now reached that point; tobacco taxes and minimum  price laws fuel crime, rather than curb smoking.

Today, it is estimated that 60 percent of the cigarettes sold in New York  City are illicit. Most of these cigarettes are smuggled in from low-tax states  like Virginia, North Carolina and Maryland.

This means that we’re criminalizing tobacco smokers, small and family  retailers, and our youth, who are now forced into buying illicit products. If  these sound reminiscent of the failures of prohibition, it’s because these are  the same problems we faced early in the last century as a result of those  similarly veined, well-intended policies. We know exactly how that experiment  turned out. And yet, politicians continue to ignore those lessons.

Today, the I-95 corridor is an enormous eight-lane pipeline flowing virtually  unimpeded with cheap illicit cigarettes, the currency of the criminal  underworld. Supplying that pipeline are – in most cases – well-organized  smuggling operations.

At up to $4 million profit per truck, it is a lucrative business with minimal  risk, especially as compared to drugs and guns; in almost all cases, the seizure  of illicit tobacco results only in a loss of contraband and a minimal fine. For  the veteran smuggler, this is simply the (low) cost of doing business.

These illegal operations need to be exposed and shutdown. Penalties need to  be increased. The message has to be: “if you’re caught, you’re going to  jail.”

The passage of the Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking (PACT) Act in 2009 was a  step in the right direction. It expanded the enforcement powers of state and  local governments. And, while it has achieved small pockets of success, PACT  needs to be much more aggressively applied and implemented. Interstate and  state-to-local government enforcement agencies need better cooperation and  coordination.

The federal and state agencies that actively investigate tobacco crimes such  as ATF, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) and  Customs need the resources to do their jobs. They also need a clear mandate from  their leadership that targeting these criminal organizations is a priority.

If our aim is to curb smoking and deter crime, we must embrace a policy of  stiffer penalties, well-funded enforcement, and stronger cooperation among  agencies, as well as state and local governments. And we need to acknowledge the  failures – nearly a hundred years after prohibition – of higher taxes, minimum  pricing and display bans.

Thomas Lesnak is a former Special Agent at the Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco, and Firearms.

Permalink

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Please Answer: *