Massachusetts' Tobacco Ban Went as Badly as You'd Expect
And now the state thinks it needs to crack down even more.
In November 2019, Massachusetts became the first state in the U.S. to ban the sale of all flavored tobacco and nicotine products, including flavored electronic cigarettes and menthol cigarettes. Four additional states have since imposed flavor bans on some products and similar policies are under consideration in many other jurisdictions. Such bans are popular among legislators and anti-smoking groups, but the latest data from Massachusetts highlight the ban's unintended consequences. The state's experiment in prohibition has led to thriving illicit markets, challenges for law enforcement, and prosecution of sellers.
Massachusetts' Multi-Agency Illegal Tobacco Task Force publishes an annual report providing insight into how the state's high taxes and flavor prohibitions affect the illicit market. As opponents of the flavor ban predicted, the law has incentivized black market sales of menthol cigarettes and flavored e-cigarettes ("ENDS," or "electronic nicotine delivery systems," in the parlance of regulators). "The Task Force identifies the cross-border smuggling of untaxed flavored ENDS products, cigars, and menthol cigarettes as the primary challenge for tobacco enforcement in the Commonwealth," according to the report. "Inspectors and investigators are routinely encountering or seizing menthol cigarettes, originally purchased in surrounding states, and flavored ENDS products and cigars purchased from unlicensed distributors operating both within and outside the Commonwealth."
The Massachusetts Department of Revenue reports conducting more than 300 seizures in FY 2022, compared to 170 in 2021 and just 10 in 2020. Many of these involve substantial amounts of products and missed tax revenue. For example, a single search warrant yielded "a large quantity of untaxed ENDS products, [other tobacco products], and Newport Menthol cigarettes affixed with New Hampshire excise tax stamps" representing an estimated $940,000 in unpaid excise taxes.
Revenue officials are seizing so many illicit products, in fact, that they are running out of room to store them. The "Task Force's increased investigative and enforcement activities during the past year have led to the seizure of large quantities of illegal tobacco products, resulting in a strain on the Task Force's storage capacity," says the report. But fear not, they are working on leasing additional space "that will significantly increase storage capacity and allow for continued increased enforcement."
Official seizures represent only a fraction of the illicit trade, so the actual extent of illegal products and lost revenue is certainly larger. The state's report notes that tobacco tax revenue has fallen by approximately 22.6 percent over three years. This is partially due to declining rates of smoking, but the authors acknowledge that smuggling of untaxed products may also be a factor.
A recent analysis of sales data by Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes Reason, found that the decline in cigarette sales in Massachusetts coincided with substantial increases in sales in counties bordering the state.
Advocates of flavor bans downplay the potential for criminal prosecutions, but the experience in Massachusetts demonstrates that opponents are right to highlight this concern. The Task Force takes note of multiple criminal investigations leading to indictment or prosecution. Although violating the flavor ban is not in itself punishable by imprisonment, forcing these products onto illicit markets results in sellers violating state tax law. In Massachusetts, this is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison.
It's only a matter of time (if it hasn't happened already) before the first American will be sentenced to prison for selling menthol cigarettes or flavored e-cigarettes. It's likely to happen in Massachusetts, where two men were arraigned last month on charges including tax evasion, money laundering, conspiracy to commit tax evasion, and flavor ban violation.
This is exactly what groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Drug Policy Alliance, and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers warned would happen under a federal menthol ban in a public letter in 2021. More recently, the New York State Sheriffs' Association wrote Gov. Kathy Hochul last month objecting to a proposed ban on menthol cigarettes on the basis that it will encourage smuggling. "We believe the proposed flavored tobacco ban and excise tax increase will only exacerbate this problem and provide hundreds of millions of dollars in additional illicit profit to criminals and criminal organizations," wrote Peter Kehoe, the Association's executive director. (New York already bans flavored e-cigarettes.) Massachusetts provides ample reason to conclude that this is a reasonable expectation.
The experience in Massachusetts has vindicated concerns that flavor bans will lead to illicit markets, arrests, and incarceration. Coupled with foregone tax revenue, evidence that the public health benefits may be less than promised, and the risk that banning flavored vaping products will deter smokers from switching to safer sources of nicotine, the unintended consequences of these policies are significant.
The Massachusetts Task Force report concludes with a series of legislative proposals responding to the flood of illicit products. If you were hoping that these proposals might include repealing flavor bans and making it legal to sell flavored vapes or menthol cigarettes to consenting adults, prepare to be disappointed. Instead, the Task Force suggests creating new felony criminal penalties for selling tobacco without a license, obtaining more inspection powers, and making it illegal for licensees to purchase tobacco products with cash.
Last year, while detailing our new era of nicotine and tobacco prohibition for Reason, I wrote that "there is a real risk that American tobacco policy will open a regressive new front in the war on drugs, just as the previous crackdown on psychoactive substances begins to wind down." By responding to the failures of its first-in-the-nation flavor prohibitions with a wish list for more police powers, this is the path Massachusetts appears poised to go down. States that wish to avoid making the same mistake should view Massachusetts as a warning, not a role model.
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The state's experiment in prohibition has led to thriving illicit markets, challenges for law enforcement, and prosecution of sellers.
Did Massachusetts not read up on American history during the period between the adoption of the 18th Amendment and the adoption of the 21st Amendment? I know, they knew they were smarter than the people back then and so this time would be different.
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"Everything is illegal in Massachusetts."
Mass has some of the most restrictive gun laws in the country. For example you need to get license from the local police just to own a firearm. Getting a carry permit is nearly impossible without connections.
Washington state: Hold my beer.
Police officer standing over dead citizen: "But I had to shoot him. I ordered him to freeze, and he continued attempting to light his cigarette!"
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Looks like New Hampshire and Rhode Island just found a new tax base at the expense of Taxachusetts.
People near the border shop in NH anyway. No sales tax and the liquor taxes are tiny compared to its neighbors. Live free or die, bitches.
Oh, and NH doesn't make you bring your own grocery bags.
Why did NH have liquor taxes at state stores? Why does any state that has state stores? Just to confuse the accounting?
Same reason they sell lottery tickets at the same counter. Money.
Be careful whom you make friends with, Llibertarians. There's a very close alignment between pro-marijuana legalization (who will say without qualification that "we need to end the drug war, maaaan") and anti-tobacco forces.
So what can you do about that? Same with myriad issues. Might as well not have friends, then, period?
No, you be careful with whom you make your friends. If the person who says he's your friend tells you he's against the drug war, while literally being for it, that way lies madness.
To be even clearer, we're not talking about someone who says "I'm a free speech absolutist" and also supports a $20 minimum wage. One is a libertarian issue, the other is an anti-libertarian issue, but on different subjects. You can make friends with that person in the realm of free speech issues.
I'm talking about someone who is literally lying to you about the very issue being discussed.
I’m just trying to get a line on some Black Lotus.
Dumbest comment ever...
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If a pregnant woman wants a menthol smoke - isn't it her body her choice? Why does Massachusetts hate women?
Your body. Our choice.
Reversing course would require them to admit they were wrong. Not gonna happen.
People, do a search on The Science behind second hand smoke. Check the lung cancer rates in 1990 vs 2020 then compare to smoking rates leading up to those years. They managed to marginalize smokers on a level to where defending it is akin to defending pedophilia. I don't think smoking is good for you ( necessary to state for social stigma reasons), but the science and public was manipulated to achieve someone's desired ends.
Anyone remember the brief campaign against 3rd hand smoke?
They thought they could have the same success with their COVID measures that they had with their anti tobacco campaign. I bet they'll manage next time with the lessons learned.
Then once they got 2nd hand smoke as a lever to regulate choice, they pivoted to third hand smoke. These were never reasonable people.
Now, admittedly, I’ve only got about a 10th grade understanding on the hard sciences, so this is by no means a rhetorical question: but how do you run an experiment that controls for every potential carcinogenic externality or life choice, over the decades it would take to show measurable lung damage from 2nd hand (or third hand) smoke?
How can you actually prove 2nd hand smoke does what they claim it does, even if it did do what they claim it does?
The main second hand evidence they use is children of smokers. Keep in mind this is a large amount of exposure. I can't speak to the actual quality of the evidence. I don't care enough to look at it.
The people who crack me up are the people who act like they are going to die if they even smell it for a second.
Without the “science”, they’re banning a smell.
I remember for years these 2nd hand smoke studies would come out, catch a bunch of ink in the papers, then eventually get tore up for being shoddy.
Then the next one would come out, “this one is definitive and irrefutable!” Then it’d get tore up. Over and over. I think people just gave up fighting over it once the bans became ubiquitous. More a matter of exhaustion than any compelling scientific proof of risk.
And while people are quick to point out any Big Tobacco money behind studies that played down the health risks, they don’t seem to have any issue with the Robert Wood Johnson foundation cranking out studies every 6 months to expound upon the risks.
As a child of smokers who doesn’t smoke, I’d still skew that research because I spent my formative years clam baking at parties, in front of a zillion grills and bonfires, stuck in traffic jams, etc etc. I just don’t see how they can control for that, Let alone after getting genetics involved.
Laws like this are made to enforce, not to help people making poor decisions. The Eric Garner's of the world won't kill themselves.
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Gotta love that term: black market for menthol cigarettes.
*sniggers*
Um… hold on.
*titters*
Most banana republics enforcing Tricky Dick and Ronnie Ray-gun christianofascist prohibitionism (thanks to the Monroe doc) still have black markets in marijuana cigarettes. Heck, California's greedy looters brought that black market back even after the Bush grow house asset forfeiture Crash exposed the imbecility of sumptuary usurpations. "We oppose sumptuary laws which vex the citizen and interfere with individual liberty; (...) We are opposed to all propositions which upon any pretext would convert the General Government into a machine for collecting taxes to be distributed among the States, or the citizens thereof." Those planks elected Grover Cleveland.
Banning menthol cigarettes? UnKool.
[OUR] Guns will ‘save’ you of that 1:1,000,000 chance of getting cancer! /s
… Because you won’t get cancer after you’re SHOT DEAD for smoking.
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“My body, my choice” does not apply universally.
I want them to make tobacco illegal so that I can buy smokes for a buck a pack from the dude down the hall.
There is no accounting for the tastes of looter collectivists. But this is one case where a little more freedom COULD make their coercion look less suicidally moronic. All they had to do was ban all flavors EXCEPT peyote.
What can I say? Massachusetts sucks, don't come here! Don't visit here. If you're going from NH or Maine to anyplace else, go via VT. Stay away if you value your sanity and your freedom and your wallet.
Yep, that’s why I left more than 20 years ago. It’s too bad because there was so much I loved about it, but the progtards were already turning it into a shithole and it’s only gotten worse , I think because others like me realized they can’t fix stupid and decided to vote with their feet, leaving the moonbats who enjoy having mommy government wipe their butts for them.
Look for this idiocy to be replicated in other blue states and cities, as always happens. If there is an FDA ban nationwide on methols and flavored vapes, I’m sure Mexico will be thrilled.
Part of the narrative for the huge increase in taxes on cigarettes was the explicit nod to vapor devices as being far preferable due to their negligible health risk. So the taxes increased an obscene amount over the years on cigarettes. When vapes became popular, the narrative shifted focus to teenagers vaping as the big problem. So today a kid can elect to undergo puberty blocking drugs, but they can't vape. And the "my body my choice" narrative pushes one and ignores the other.
This type of bait and switch has a long history in the US and has grown substantially in the past several decades. As a child of the 1960's, I latched onto the notion of always distrusting authority. As an adult, that translated into obtaining information from as many diverse sources (that is, diverse in thought) as possible and cross-correlating the information across sources. The bottom line is no single source can alone be trusted. And the greater the number of logical fallacies or factual omissions that a given source exhibits (they all have some), the more likely that source should be ignored.