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"Business dropped off for a while and it caused a lot of complaining,"
Cindy Wilkinson, co-manager cheap cigarettes online store of Tobacco Place on Jefferson Street in
Dublin, said of the increased tax. "But people are going to smoke
regardless, and a lot of people said they can get them a lot cheaper
off the Internet."Online cigarette dealers operate on the same
rules as any other mail-order service: If the company selling the product
isn't based in Georgia, the customer doesn't have to pay Georgia taxes,
said Dennis Rich of the Georgia Department of Revenue.


That means a 10-pack carton of cigarettes bought online will cost $3.70
less than a carton bought in a Georgia store. Some sites charge shipping
and handling, others don't.To raise money during the state's cheap cigarettes online store a budget
crunch, Georgia increased the excise tax on cigarettes this year to
37 cents a pack, up from 12 cents. Until then, Georgia's tobacco tax
had been one of the lowest in the United States, so there was little
reason for Georgia smokers to purchase cigarettes online and avoid the
tax, Rich said.But now, Rich expects more Georgians to buy cigarettes
through the Internet.
Many states have seen a spike in Internet sales cheap cigarettes online store shortly after an increase
in tobacco taxes, said Ali Davoudi, president of eSmokes.com and the
Online Tobacco Retailers Association. It's too early to determine whether
that is happening in Georgia, he said.
About 400 tobacco sellers currently are operating on the cheap cigarettes online store Internet, said
Davoudi. They have names like Dirtcheapcigs.com andSilvercloudsmokeshop.com.
Many, such as the Alllegany Indian Reservation's Redjackettobacco.com,
are operated by federally recognized American Indian tribes.Some lawmakers
have worried that online tobacco retailers sell their products to underage
smokers. But Davoudi says his company pays an extra $2.75 per order
for UPS to obtain a 21-year-old's signature upon delivery."The
average buyer of online tobacco is a 52-year-old woman. It's not kids,"
Davoudi said. "Inherent in our business model is the fact that
we only sell by the carton and most kids don't have that kind of disposable
income. And you have to have a credit card to place the order."The
higher tobacco taxes in Georgia could create a boon for black-market
cigarettes in stores and online, Davoudi and Rich said.
As an experiment, Brown & Williamson employees Tim Galoppa and cheap cigarettes online store Pat
Moore recently ordered two cartons from an online site. One carton was
fine, but Moore said the other was marked "for export P to be sold
outside the U.S. only."
"There are some things on the Internet that are legit, but that
carton had to be a black-market product," Moore said