Showing posts with label attorney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attorney. Show all posts

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Illegal Cigarette Sales To Minors

It's a big problem for many states -- stopping the illegal sale of cheap cigarettes to minors. Wednesday, Arizona's attorney general gave us an update on how the program is doing.

Underage kids set up clerks to hand over cigarettes illegally as part of a sting operation called Counter Strike. It began in 2002 and Wednesday we got this year's results.

The kids who pose as underage cigarettes store buyers for the group have hit 2,000 stores across the state, and they try to get away with breaking the law.

"288 or nearly 15 percent failed because they sold cheap cigarette online to minors," said Attorney General Tom Horne.

Teens reported many cashiers didn't even check their ID. Others would glance at it, but didn't do the math and realize they were underage. Others would swipe it through the machine and sell it anyway.

Tom Horne says more rural stores failed the test than urban ones. But overall the failure rate has gone down since the program was initiated in 2002.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Selling Tobacco To Minors

Retail outlets are failing when it comes to selling tobacco products to minors.

Wednesday, Attorney General Tom Horne released the latest results from statewide inspections.

For fiscal year 2011, nearly 2,000 outlets were inspected for possible violations. 14.6%, 288 locations, failed. In Apache, Coconino, Gila, Graham, Greenlee, La Paz, Navajo and Pinal Counties, the failure rate was 25% or higher. The remaining counties reflected the statewide average.

Attorney General Horne says the results are unacceptable.

"For every 20 minors that walk into a store in Arizona to buy cigarettes, three of them - without fake ID's or lying or even trying to hide their true age - will be able to buy cigarettes," he said.

To fight the problem, Attorney General Horne announced a new TV and radio Public Service Announcement that warns store personnel that they could personally be fined up to $300 for selling to underage buyers.

Since 2002 the Attorney General's Office has partnered with the Arizona Department of Health Services to develop and maintain the CounterStrike program. The program monitors retailer compliance with state laws that prohibit the sale of tobacco products to minors. Over 23,000 retail inspections have been performed since the program's inception.