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An Indian nation from Central New York is
placing tobacco kiosks in some Buffalo-area convenience stores that
will allow the electronic mail ordering of tax-free cigarettes at a
savings of up to $20 a carton.
The move, a first according to industry officials, came Tuesday, the
day before today's 39-cents-per-pack state tax increase. That increase
brings the total state tax on a pack of smokes to $1.50, the highest in
the nation.
The Oneida Indian Nation, the nation that operates the Turning Stone
gambling casino at Verona, installed its first Internet-based tobacco
kiosk in the Yellow Goose convenience store on Colvin Avenue, the first
of six planned installations.

June 15, 2004 - ANCHORAGE - After receiving
several tips that cigarettes with Russian writing were being sold in
Marshall, the village law enforcement officer busted a local shop.
The case involved 500 packs of Russian-manufactured Marlboros that were
purchased over the Internet. The cigarettes were almost all sold
illegally for more than a 400 percent profit, according to the
Anchorage Daily News.
Marshall, a western Alaska village of 370 in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta,
is too small to have its own troopers post, but Richard Ellis, the
local village public safety officer, works closely with state law
enforcement.
According to troopers, Ellis got several tips in April that a video
store in Marshall was selling cigarettes with Russian writing on them.
He started investigating with the help of the Alaska Department of
Revenue's Tax Division, which handles the state's cigarette tax
program.
Cigarettes are taxed a dollar a pack in Alaska. Residents can legally
order cigarettes over the Internet but are required by state law to get
a license from the Revenue Department first and purchase Alaska tax
stamps for every pack of smokes they bring in, according to Johanna
Bales, who manages the state's tobacco tax program.

The intent of the stamp is to ensure that importers pay the state tax,
Bales said. The shopkeeper in Marshall had neither a license nor
stamps, troopers said.
The cigarette packs he was selling also lacked the required surgeon
general's warning, Bales said.
"Even if they had a tax stamp on them, it's illegal to put a tax stamp
on them" without that health warning, she said.
On May 12, Ellis seized 15 packs of Marlboros from the shopkeeper - the
last of the 500. The shopkeeper could face felony charges for importing
illegal and untaxed cigarettes into the state.
Charles King, a state tobacco and gambling investigator who assisted in
the investigation, said the shopkeeper bought the cigarettes over the
Internet from a distributor in Florida or Alabama for around $14 a
carton, or $1.40 a pack, and then sold them for about $6 a pack.
"He made good money," King said.
Trooper Karl Main said he wasn't too surprised to hear that there were
black-market cigarettes in rural Alaska. With higher prices and less
law enforcement than most places, "rural areas can become somewhat of a
popular ground for this type of behavior," he said.

Tobacco taxes put about $47 million into Alaska's coffers annually,
according to Bales, the program manager.
State and federal officials don't know how much revenue is lost to
illegal sales. Bales said that in 2001, two businesses in the Lower 48
that sold cigarettes over the Internet revealed, at the state's
request, how many customers they had in Alaska. One company reported
selling cigarettes to 600 individuals in the state over a 13-month
period. The other showed 400 over a 10-month period.
The state believes it lost about $600,000 in unpaid taxes in those two
cases alone, Bales said.
"This is serious business," she said.