Posted on 07/19/2003 3:07:09 PM PDT by Marianne
ALBANY - The state Tax Department, concerned about threats of violence from members of the Seneca Nation of Indians, is poised to go after consumers who buy untaxed cigarettes from Internet and mail-order Native American retailers.
The agency's head of enforcement told a state tobacco control panel Thursday that tax officials are working with federal and state agencies to get names of consumers who make those purchases.
Peter Farrell, deputy commissioner at the Tax Department, said consumers could become targets if the agency can't get shipping companies and Native American retailers to comply with a state law enacted in 2000 that bans tobacco sales over the Internet. The law recently was upheld by federal courts.
"They would be billed for excise taxes, sales taxes and penalties," Farrell said of consumers. He did not specify how names would be obtained.
The Tax Department was able to start legally enforcing the Internet cigarette sales ban June 18. But Farrell said his agency is "proceeding with caution" because of threats from Senecas and pending legal fights. Farrell accused Native American retailers of committing fraud against the state, which is losing up to $400 million a year in cigarette tax revenues.
"They've threatened to set the Thruway on fire again and shoot up (state) trooper cars up there," he said. "We're slowing getting to the point of deciding whether we're going to put people in harm's way" to begin blocking the cigarette sales.
Farrell said he is concerned that the state "is headed back to the confrontation this office had in 1997 where people were injured." In 1997, violent protests, led by Seneca members, were sparked by the state's brief attempt to stop the sales of the untaxed cigarettes.
The state, for now, will pin its efforts on shippers and, by targeting consumers with tax bills, persuading smokers to buy their tobacco products legally.
Farrell said six officials have been deputized as federal marshals to deal with the Native American tax issue and four have been dispatched to Western New York.
Seneca President Rickey Armstrong declined to comment, according to a spokeswoman.
Farrell also criticized the federal government for not helping the state enforce the law. He said 40 shippers have agreed to stop delivering cigarettes for Native American retailers over the past month or so. "They don't want any trouble with us," he told the panel.
But the U.S. Postal Service, citing its internal rules, has refused, and the state can't tell the federal agency what it can and can't deliver.
Farrell said Gov. George E. Pataki and State Attorney General Eliot L. Spitzer have drafted a letter to the U.S. Postal Service urging it to "promptly stop shipment of cigarettes."
He claims the federal government is impeding the state's efforts to collect the taxes "in that they tend to support Indian rights while ignoring the rights of governors to govern in their states."
Native American retailers say the state has no right to collect the tax because the sales occur on sovereign territory. A federal appeals court rejected that claim in February, giving the green light for the state to enforce the 2000 law. With New York's tax at $1.50 per pack of cigarettes, industry officials have estimated that upward of 40 percent of cigarette purchases are done thorough untaxed outlets.
Farrell said the tax agency in the coming weeks will move "to a more proactive role" in enforcing the law. The only step he would disclose is undercover purchases of cigarettes to see how they are delivered.
Members of the Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Program Advisory Board, which advises the state Health Department on tobacco issues, beamed as Farrell spoke to them via speakerphone. The panel has clashed over the years with the Pataki administration over tobacco control efforts.
"I think Mr. Farrell is the kind of public servant that we need and he should be unleashed," said Russell Sciandra, a board member and director of the Center for a Tobacco Free New York.
A lawyer for Seneca tobacco retailers, however, called Farrell's comments "a desperate indication of almost a government conspiracy to violate Indian constitutional rights."
Joseph Crangle, a Buffalo lawyer and lobbyist for the Seneca retailers, said no violence has been carried out or planned to oppose the cigarette tax law.
"It sounds to me as if this fellow, in all due respect, is like President Bush about weapons of mass destruction and therefore we have to invade," Crangle said. "They still have difficulty understanding that Indian reservations are not part of New York State."
He said the Pataki administration should be content to hear what a federal judge has to say about a lawsuit brought by his clients, which include a Seneca retailer, seeking to block the law; the action was brought after a similar suit was lost by the tobacco industry earlier this year.
Farrell said his agency is not restrained in enforcing the law because no injunction has been put in place halting it while the lawsuit is decided.
But he said the lawsuit brought by Crangle's clients has left the governor's office concerned that "if we go too far too fast" in enforcing the law, it could lead to an injunction against the state to block enforcement until the case is decided.
When the State tried to enforce this law several years ago, it was proposed that State Troopers should be stationed just off reservation land. Then non-indian purchasers of cigarettes would be pulled over, as they left the reservation, and assessed the "necessary" taxes, fines, etc. The Indians went on the "warpath" and the state backed down.
Al Capone is laughing his ass off.
Several years ago the States had a Booze war, hard liquor is cheaper in NH. The NH cops would arrest the Mass Troopers, who were sent to do the licence plate recording routine outside of State Liquor stores, tresspass on state property, there was a was brewing funnyest thing I have ever seen.
It's about time somebody impeded the highway robbers.
It's also time we all got serious about growing our own. :-}
Regards,
I plan to do so starting next year!!!!!!!!!
And I will more than happy to share!!!!
Sharing with me, wouldn't do any good, as it would have to cross the border. :-}
"Unleashed."
How precious.
Private mail, between private citizens is just that - PRIVATE!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's nobody's business what I am sending you for your birthday!!!!!!!!!!
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