Here cheap cigarettes
Cheap cigarettes
sales
Two convenience store retailers will also participate
cheap cigarettes online store in the event: Gary Krull, president of DePere, Wis.-based Country Express
Auto/Truck Stop, and Lily Bentas, president and CEO of Canton, Mass.-based
Cumberland Farms Inc.Green and Meehan will unveil their bill and discuss
the measure at a news conference tomorrow at the Cannon House Office
Building Terrace in Washington. They will be joined at the event by
organizations supporting the legislation, which include cheap cigarettes online store the National
Association of Convenience Stores (NACS).

But Matthew Fairshter, the company's lawyer, argues cheap cigarettes online store that the law was
designed to regulate the shipment of untaxed cigarettes from one state
into another. The smokes sold by dirtcheapcigs.com are all duly taxed
in Kentucky, he argues.
"They're not buying untaxed cigarettes, which is what the Jenkins
Act is all about," Fairshter said. "The Jenkins Act does not
regulate this issue."
Fairshter also argued that the state's lawsuit violates the cheap cigarettes online store Internet
Tax Freedom Act, which protects online sales from taxation except where
the transaction actually takes place. The lawsuit seeks to invoke the
Jenkins Act, a decades-old federal law that requires dealers who ship
cigarettes to customers in another state to provide that state's authorities
with a list of customers every month. The law was designed to prevent
large-scale tax evasion, and the state argues that it applies to cheap cigarettes online store Internet
sales. "This company operates out of Paducah, Kentucky," Fairshter
said. "It does no business in the state of Washington."

"This legislation will address a significant loophole cheap cigarettes online store
that negatively impacts the ability of the more than 132,000 convenience
stores operating in the U.S. to compete on a level playing field,"
said Allison Shulman, director of government affairs for NACS.
The state Department of Revenue estimates that perhaps 40 percent of
the cigarettes smoked in Washington are contraband smuggled in from
out-of-state, bought at tax-exempt Indian smoke shops cheap cigarettes online store on reservations
or purchased by mail or through the Internet.
"We estimate that contraband cigarettes maybe account for $250
million of lost revenue," Gregoire said. "It's lost taxes
to the state of Washington, that goes without saying. It's also not
fair to the brick-and-mortar store in Washington that's abiding by the
law." OLYMPIA Attorney General Christine Gregoire is trying to
force an Internet cigarette dealer to cough up its list of Washington
customers so the state can levy its steep tobacco tax on them.
The lawsuit filed yesterday in Thurston County Superior cheap cigarettes online store Court seeks
an injunction against dirtcheapcig.com, which sells cigarettes online
from Kentucky, forcing the company to disclose its customers within
Washington.
That would allow the state to track down the buyers and collect both
the cigarette tax of $1.425 per pack and the 6.5 percent use tax the
tax the state levies on out-of-state purchases by Washington residents
in lieu of the sales tax.

As states continue to raise their excise taxes -- there
have been three dozen state cigarette tax increases implemented since
January 1, 2002, according to NACS -- smokers are flocking to remote
sellers for cheap cigarettes online store tax-free cigarettes. Forrester Research estimates that 14
percent of all cigarette sales will be via the Internet by 2005 if loopholes
are not addressed."The Green-Meehan bill ensures that the tax burdens
are equal for all retailers of cigarettes and smokeless tobacco,"
Shulman said.The company bills itself as "The last refuge of the
persecuted smoker." A 10-pack carton of Marlboros sells for less
than $30 on the site, cheap cigarettes online store compared with as much as $50 in Washington.

Mike Gowrylow, a spokesman for the Department cheap cigarettes online store of Revenue, said the Internet
Tax Freedom Act was designed to prevent new and discriminatory taxes
on Internet sales, not pre-empt existing laws such as the Jenkins Act
and the use tax. "This is neither new nor discriminatory,"
Gowrylow said.
In general, Internet and mail-order retailers can't be compelled to
collect Washington taxes or provide customer lists unless they're physically
located here. That puts the burden of paying any taxes on the cheap cigarettes online store consumer,
who typically doesn't show much interest in paying.Enforcing the use
tax is virtually impossible except on large items such as boats or cars
that must be registered with the state.