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Busting the Myths Tobacco Control and Illicit Trade

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Title: Busting the Myths Tobacco Control and Illicit Trade


1
Busting the MythsTobacco Control and Illicit
Trade
  • November 29th, 2011
  • International Legal Consortium
  • Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

2
Introduction
  • Patricia Lambert
  • Director
  • International Legal Consortium
  • Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

3
Questions and Answers
Type your questions here throughout the webinar
and we will answer them at the end.
4
  • John W. Colledge III
  • Consultant on Anti-Illicit Trade
  • Supervisory Criminal Investigator
  • (Retired)
  • Department of Homeland Security
  • and
  • the U.S. Customs Service

5
Moderator
h
  • Aaron Schwid
  • Legal Advisor
  • International Legal Consortium
  • Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

6
http//www.youtube.com/user/WelcomeToBAT
7
http//www.jti.com/cr_home/cr_positions/cr_positio
ns_anti-contraband/cr_positions_anti-contraband_dr
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KEY FACTORS FACILITATING CIGARETTE CONTRABAND 1.
High taxation 2. Inadequate law enforcement 3.
Trade regulatory controls
8
Fact or Fiction?
  • Studies show that public health measures increase
    illicit tobacco trade.

9
Unreliable Sources and Misinformation
  • Think tank reports
  • Mackinac Center for Public Policy.
  • Frasier Institute.
  • International Tax and Investment Center (ITIC).
  • Industry Sites, e.g. Plainpack.com
  • News media
  • Misused Terms or Slang

10
Reliable Sources
11
Elements of Reliable Sources
  • Not funded by industry
  • Industry involvement in illicit trade considered
  • Well sourced
  • Published dates and timeframe of data
  • Proper Use of Key Terms

12
Key Terms
  • Illicit trade.
  • Tax evasion.
  • Contraband.
  • Smuggling.
  • Illegal Manufacturing.
  • Counterfeit.

13
(No Transcript)
14
Contraband
  • Tax Evasion
  • Non-tax paid products.
  • Its about the money
  • Crime of greed, not passion
  • Smuggled merchandise.
  • Illegal Manufacture
  • Stolen

15
Smuggling and Diversion
  • A form of tax evasion.
  • Smuggling - across intl border
  • Diversion - within national boundaries
  • Concealment
  • Avoiding Customs Controls
  • Intermingling
  • Fraud
  • False Documents
  • False Statements

16
Illegally Manufactured
  • Counterfeit
  • Non-licensed production
  • Over-production
  • Authentic trademarks
  • Likely identical products
  • Undeclared

17
Counterfeit
  • A form of tax evasion. Never legal.
  • Fraudulently manufacturing, altering, or
    distributing a product that is of lesser value
    than the genuine product.
  • Trademark protection Trade-Related Aspects of
    Intellectual Property (TRIPS)
  • Trends.
  • History
  • Volume.
  • Authenticity determinations.

18
Slang Terms to Avoid
  • Bootlegging.
  • Large Scale/Small Scale Smuggling.
  • Ant Smuggling.
  • Cheap Whites.

19
Fact or Fiction?
  • Illicit Trade started in the 1990s and increased
    after the FCTC came into force.

20
Brief History of Illicit Tobacco Trade
  • Began immediately after the discovery of tobacco
    to avoid tobacco monopolies and taxes.
  • Cigarettes became a cash substitute.
  • Constantly evolving schemes.
  • Tobacco products used to launder crimes proceeds.

21
Transnational Organized Crime
  • UNTOC United Nations Convention Against
    Transnational Organized Crime.
  • Organized criminal group shall mean a
  • structured group of three or more persons,
  • existing for a period of time and acting in
    concert
  • with the aim of committing one or more serious
    crimes or offences established in accordance with
    this Convention,
  • in order to obtain, directly or indirectly, a
    financial or other material benefit

22
Illicit Trade is Organized Crime
  • Raises seriousness of tobacco crimes
  • Additional police powers for the government, e.g.
    special investigative techniques
  • Seizure and forfeiture of criminal proceeds
  • Other increased criminal sanctions

23
Fact or Fiction?
  • High taxes are the root cause of illicit tobacco
    trade.

24
Tax Increases and Illicit Trade
  • Fact Tax disparities between jurisdictions
    provide an opportunity for smuggling. High taxes
    provide an opportunity for other forms of illicit
    trade.
  • BUT effective enforcement mechanisms work
  • Effective government-controlled tracking
    (pro-active detection)
  • Effective government-controlled tracing
    (investigation and post-seizure analysis)
  • Properly staffed, trained, and resourced
    enforcement personnel
  • Adequate criminal sanctions

25
Example California
  • High income, large population
  • Enforcement protections accompanied a tax
    increase
  • Enhanced revenue protection
  • Secure digital tax stamp
  • Additional staffing
  • Enhanced law enforcement powers
  • Additional criminal sanctions

26
Example Brazil
  • Rapidly developing economy, large population,
    large borders
  • Enforcement protections solidified before a major
    tax increase
  • Enhanced revenue protection
  • Secure digital tax stamp
  • Additional staffing
  • Enhanced law enforcement powers
  • Additional criminal sanctions

27
Example Arkansas
  • Small economy, small population
  • Interstate diversion bordering states with lower
    taxes
  • Enforcement protections accompanied a tax
    increase
  • Basic tracing system, but no effective tracking
    system
  • Enhanced revenue protection
  • Unique asset forfeiture fund
  • Additional staffing
  • Enhanced law enforcement powers
  • Additional criminal sanctions

28
Fact or Fiction?
  • Plain packaging will increase illicit tobacco
    trade.

29
Plain-Packaging and Illicit Trade
  • FACT Plain packaging has never been introduced
    on the market so there is no evidence that it
    will increase illicit trade.
  • Effective enforcement mechanisms work
  • Tracking - Digital tax system.
  • Tracing - Criminal investigative techniques.
  • Counterfeit.
  • Trademarks.
  • Graphic warnings.
  • Other technologies to protect trademarks

30
Fact or Fiction?
Industry cannot meet quickly changing regulations
so hole will be filled by organized crime.
31
Regulatory Changes and Illicit Trade
  • Fact Such claims encourage hoarding which is
    likely to result in increased earnings for
    industry and government.
  • Fact Competition in marketplace encourages legal
    businesses to satisfy supply before organized
    crime does.
  • Fact In countries with graphic health warnings,
    organized crime did not take over market.
  • Governments should include a rapid, but
    practical, implementation period for all
    regulatory measures.

32
Fact or Fiction?
  • Legal tobacco products are safer than illegal
    ones.

33
Illegal Products and Safety
  • Fact Safety allegations have not been supported
    by reliable evidence simply unsupported
    statements.
  • Illegal manufacturers purchase tobacco,
    ingredients, key inputs and equipment from major
    companies.
  • Few countries regulate ingredients in tobacco
    products, in part because whether certain
    chemical combinations in tobacco are dangerous is
    unknown.
  • High-quality tobacco products are designed to
    deliver nicotine, a known poison. When used as
    intended, legal tobacco products kill.

34
Fact or Fiction?
  • Tobacco companies lose money because of illicit
    trade.

35
Industry Involvement in Illicit Trade
  • FACT Counterfeit manufacturing may damage the
    tobacco industry however, existing trademark
    laws provide sufficient protection for the
    tobacco industry.
  • Government should prioritize public health and
    revenue (tax) protection.
  • FACT Historic and ongoing evidence of industry
    involvement in illicit trade, especially
    smuggling and overproduction.

36
Industry Involvement in Smuggling
  • Philip Morris International and Japan Tobacco
    International entered into a legal agreement with
    the European Community and 10 member states to
    settle litigation against them that would have
    further exposed their involvement in cigarette
    smuggling. (2004)
  • British American Tobacco and Philip Morris
    International settled its smuggling-related
    litigation with Canada. (2008)
  • Japan Tobacco International plead guilty to
    violations of tax laws and R.J. Reynolds pled
    guilty to criminal charges related to cigarette
    smuggling in Canada. (2010)

37
CEO of Reynolds American and Fortune 500 most
powerful women
4. The possibilities of GT exploitation were
considered to be good (Ghana Cameroon). . .
7. I accept that in retrospect we may have been
over optimistic about its potential in Togo,
Benin, Niger, but the main reason for its launch
in these markets was not to exploit domestic
markets but for GT opportunities.
38
Recent Allegations against JTI
  • Executives of Japan Tobacco International stood
    by as its distributors engaged in widespread
    cigarette smuggling in a dozen countries.
  • When the companys anti-smuggling unit cracked
    down on smuggling routes and raised questions
    about suspect distributors, JTI retaliated by
    hacking into the teams computers, firing its
    leaders, and phasing out nearly a dozen
    contractors who knew about the smuggling.
  • Big Trouble at Big Tobacco, Organized Crime and
    Corruption Reporting Project, available at
    http//www.reportingproject.net/troubles_with_big_
    tobacco/

39
Fact or Fiction?
  • Tobacco companiesmust be involved in designing
    policies around illicit trade.

40
Industry Interference in Policy Making
  • FACT Industry may have a legitimate interest in
    preventing illicit trade
  • BUT any government interactions should follow all
    recommendations from FCTC Art. 5.3 Guidelines
    relating to necessity and transparency
  • Consultation v. Partnership distinction
  • Information flow on case-by-case basis
  • OECD Guidelines Managing Conflicts of Interest
    in the Public Sector, available at
    http//www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/31/48994419.pdf?co
    ntentId48994420
  • United Nations Convention Against Corruption,
    available at http//www.unodc.org/unodc/en/treat
    ies/CAC/index.html

41
Who does the industry talk to?
  • International Agencies
  • World Customs Organization
  • Interpol
  • Domestic Policy Makers
  • Legislators
  • Ministries (Finance, Industry, Trade, Interior,
    Justice)
  • Enforcement Agencies
  • Tax, Customs, Police, Antifraud, Anticorruption

42
Why does the industry talk to these
organizations?
  • Influence Legislation and Policy
  • Influence Enforcement Priorities
  • Protect the Profits

43
What You Can and Must Do
  1. Self-education Learn the subject matter. Verify
    sources. If you still have questions, reach out.
  2. Monitor tobacco trade and taxation in your region
  3. Identify and lobby appropriate policy makers and
    enforcement agencies
  4. Acknowledge the role of organized crime in
    tobacco, but put tobacco in context with other
    commodities

44
What You Can and Must Do
  1. Prepare counterarguments on illicit trade
    arguments before proposing tax and other public
    health measures.
  2. Remind policymakers, media, and public of
    industrys role in illicit tobacco trade and
    their profit motivation
  3. Support additional funding and training of
    enforcement agencies
  4. Insist on transparency for any interaction
    between tobacco industry and any policy makers or
    enforcement agencies

45
Additional Resources
  • More information available at
    http//tobaccofreecenter.org/resources/illicit_tra
    de_smuggling
  • Campbell D. Further Evidence By Duncan Campbell
    in Respect of Smuggling in Africa by British
    American Tobacco Plc, Obstruction of Access to
    Evidence. UK House of Commons Health Select
    Committee, Inquiry into the Tobacco Industry and
    the Health Risks of Smoking. London. January 15,
    2000. Available at http//duncan.gn.apc.org/bat/H
    ealth_Committee_Evidence_2.htm. Accessed
    November 30, 2011.
  • The Center for Public Integrity, Tobacco
    Underground, The Blooming Global Trade in
    Smuggled Cigarettes. available online at
    http//www.publicintegrity.org/investigations/toba
    cco/articles/. Accessed November 30, 2011.
  • Collin J, LeGresley E, MacKenzie R, Lawrence S,
    Lee K. Complicity in Contraband British American
    Tobacco and Cigarette Smuggling in Asia. Tobacco
    Control 200413((Supp II))ii96-ii111.
  • Lee K, Collin J. 'Key to the future' British
    American Tobacco and cigarette smuggling in
    China. PLoS Medicine 20063(7)228-37.
  • LeGresley E, Lee K, Muggli ME, Patel P, Collin J,
    Hurt RD. British American Tobacco and the
    "insidious impact of illicit trade" in cigarettes
    across Africa. Tobacco Control 2008doi10.1136/tc
    .2008.025999.
  • U.K. Action on Smoking and Health. Submission to
    the House of Commons Health Select Committee.
    February 16, 2000. Available at
    http//www.ash.org.uk/files/documents/ASH_567.pdf.
    Accessed November 30,2011.
  • World Bank and World Health Organization. Tobacco
    Control in Developing Countries. (2000)Chapter
    16 Issues in the smuggling of tobacco products.
    Available at http//web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTE
    RNAL/TOPICS/EXTHEALTHNUTRITIONANDPOPULATION/EXTETC
    /0,,contentMDK20226973menuPK478900pagePK14895
    6piPK216618theSitePK376601,00.html. Accessed
    November 30, 2011
  • World Health Organization. The cigarette
    "transit" road to the Islamic Republic of Iran
    and Iraq. Illicit tobacco trade in the Middle
    East. Cairo WHO_EM/TFI/011/E/G/07.03/1000)
    http//www.emro.who.int/tfi/TFIiraniraq.pdf.
    Accessed November 30, 2011.

46
Busting the MythsTobacco Control and Illicit
Trade
  • Questions and Answers

47
  • Thank You.
  • Join Us in February
  • for our next Webinar on
  • Tracking and Tracing.
  • For more information, go to
  • www.tobaccocontrollaws.org
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