Category: News

  • 25 Attorneys General Urge Tougher Rules for Online Tobacco Sales

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta and the City of New York co-led a bipartisan coalition of 25 attorneys general in pressing Shopify Inc. to take tougher action against merchants selling illegal tobacco products — particularly e-cigarettes — through its platform. In a letter sent November 24, the group requested a meeting with Shopify to develop a comprehensive solution, noting that, despite existing policies, sellers continue to use the service to market unlawful products.

    California’s Department of Justice said Shopify has previously cooperated with enforcement efforts, terminating certain e-cigarette sellers flagged by state officials. The coalition identified 29 illegal e-cigarette websites currently hosted on Shopify and enclosed an exhibit listing more than 200 additional sites selling unlawful tobacco products.

    The other attorneys general in the coalition represent Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

    Bonta has also taken prior action against individual sellers, including lawsuits targeting companies marketing flavored disposable e-cigarettes.


    This article was adapted from an original report published on tobaccoreporter.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • KT&G and Altria Set to Accelerate Global Pouch Expansion

    KT&G told Nate News it is on track to launch a serious push into the global nicotine pouch market next year. The company said it expects this year’s $176.8 million acquisition of Another Snus Factory to close as planned, followed by disposing of a 49% stake to Altria.

    “Starting next year, we plan to expand the nicotine pouch business beyond the five Nordic countries [Iceland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Finland] to Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and North America,” a KT&G official said.

    Market research firm Euromonitor reports the global nicotine pouch market reached $11.2 billion in 2024 and is forecast to grow by more than 30% this year.


    This article was adapted from an original report published on tobaccoreporter.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • JT Announces Boardroom Shake-Up: Major Leadership and Board Changes

    Japan Tobacco Inc. (JT) said its Board of Directors has approved a series of executive and board changes, led by a new appointment to the company’s top job.

    Takehiko Tsutsui, currently executive vice president of JT International, has been chosen to become president and Chief Executive Officer, succeeding Masamichi Terabatake. Terabatake will move into the role of deputy chairperson of the Board. The leadership change is slated to take effect January 1, 2026, pending ratification at the shareholders’ meeting and final approval by the Board. Tsutsui joined JT in 1997 and has served as a vice president since 2012.

    The Board will also see Shigeaki Okamoto named chairperson, and Yukiko Uchida appointed as a director. At the same time, Yukiko Nagashima and current chair Mutsuo Iwai have announced their resignations. These Board changes will become effective at the conclusion of the shareholders’ meeting scheduled for March 25, 2026.

    Other executive moves announced include Adam Vilalta’s appointment as senior vice president of marketing for the Tobacco Business in Japan, following the resignation of Igor Dzaja, and the promotion of Hisashi Shimobayashi to senior vice president, Chief Technology & Information Security Officer.


    This article was adapted from an original report published on tobaccoreporter.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • Labstat Announces New President — Meet the Executive Leading Its Next Chapter

    Labstat Inc., a Certified Group company and the world’s largest independent nicotine testing laboratory, has appointed Scott LaNeve as its new president. LaNeve brings more than three decades of leadership experience in life sciences, diagnostics and healthcare technology, including senior roles at Abbott Laboratories, Roche Diagnostics and Quest Diagnostics, as well as executive posts in national laboratory networks and technology firms.

    In announcing the appointment, LaNeve said he was honored to join Labstat, which operates laboratories in Canada, the U.S. and Europe focused on nicotine, tobacco and cannabis testing. He stressed his commitment to advancing Labstat’s role in global tobacco harm reduction by providing trusted testing and actionable, data-driven insights to clients.

    Certified Group CEO David Morgan welcomed the hire, pointing to LaNeve’s strategic vision and operational expertise as central to reinforcing Labstat’s leadership worldwide.


    This article was adapted from an original report published on tobaccoreporter.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • Charged in Alleged Drug Operation, VIP Smoke Shop Owners Insist They’re Innocent – WLWT

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    This article was adapted from an original report published on news.google.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • Sheriff: Major Drug Seizures Made During Raids on Wilson Vape Shops

    Investigators with the Wilson County Sheriff’s Office executed search warrants Tuesday at six businesses accused of selling vapes and other THC-laden products, including marijuana.

    Sheriff Calvin Woodard said the office has been conducting a months-long probe centered on local high school students who bought the products and, in some cases, overdosed at school. Deputies confiscated 50 pounds of marijuana from one Wilson business, the J Blaize Smoke Shop.

    WCSO Chief of Staff Wanda Samuel named six people arrested Tuesday and said additional arrests are expected.

    Arrests
    – Hamme Nasser, 28, of the 1300 block of Lakeside Drive in Wilson — arrested at Space Exotic in Wilson; charged with felony selling a Schedule VI controlled substance, felony maintaining a place for a controlled substance and felony possession of a Schedule I controlled substance.
    – Basheer Muhammed Aaser, 41, of the 300 block of Catharine Court West in Wilson — arrested at Tareq I Mini Mart in Stantonsburg; charged with felony selling a Schedule VI controlled substance and felony maintaining a place for a controlled substance.
    – Saber Jamal Shaya Korin, 38, of the 1100 block of Forest Hills Road Northwest in Wilson — arrested at J Blaize in Wilson; charged with felony maintaining a place for a controlled substance.
    – Summer Ashlyn Fulghum, 21, of the 1100 block of Vance Street in Wilson — arrested at the Smoke & Toke in Wilson; charged with three counts of felony maintaining a place for a controlled substance and three counts of felony selling a Schedule VI controlled substance.
    – Tareq Ali Ahmed Zabara, 47, of the 2500 block of St. Christopher Circle, Wilson — arrested at Tareq 1 Mini Mart in Stantonsburg; charged with felony selling a Schedule VI controlled substance.
    – Mohammed Outaous, 48, of the 3700 block of Ashbrook Drive in Wilson — arrested at the Grab and Go Mart in Elm City; charged with felony selling a Schedule VI controlled substance.

    Businesses searched Tuesday
    – Smoke and Toke, 2861 Ward Blvd., Unit G, Wilson
    – J Blaize Smoke Shop, 1400 Ward Blvd., Wilson
    – 7 Daze, 501 Raleigh Road Parkway W., Wilson
    – Space Exotic, 1903 U.S. 301, Wilson
    – Tareq 1 Mini Mart, 218 Moyton Ave., Stantonsburg
    – Grab and Go Mart, 101 Parker St., Elm City

    Rising number of overdoses

    “We have been having a lot of vape situations in high schools where kids have been having a lot of medical issues, overdosing on it. Some kids are getting suspended. Some are being charged,” Woodard said.

    Using information from the WCSO detective assigned to schools and school resource officers, investigators targeted vape shops and gas stations selling THC products — tetrahydrocannabinol, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. Deputies made purchases from several outlets and had the items tested at a private lab.

    “We were able to uncover that these vapes had more THC in them than normal marijuana. Plus, some of the operations they were conducting, they were actually being sold marijuana from behind the counter along with these vapes,” Woodard said. “So we are hitting all these vape stores. We are doing it simultaneously.”

    By law, products cannot contain more than 0.3% THC, Woodard noted. “But these vapes were like 85%,” he said.

    Woodard said area high schools have seen a sharp increase in vaping-related medical emergencies, disrupting classrooms when EMS and law enforcement are called. He urged parents to be aware: “The parents really need to be mindful of what their kids are doing, what they are vaping.”

    Some vapes are flavored and do not emit the scent of marijuana. “From our investigation, these people know that these vapes contain these ingredients and they are still out here selling them to our kids,” Woodard said. “And then we have got kids that are trying to sell them in the schools. We need to get rid of this. These kids are going into medical emergencies at these schools, and we are not going to have this junk. It’s not going to happen in Wilson County and we are not playing with this.”

    Regulatory gap complicates enforcement

    Maj. Brandon Barbrey said the liquid vapes exist in an unregulated market because current law does not set limits for many THC products. “It is a liquid that is vaporized. It is an unregulated market because there is no legislation as far as the limits with the THC stuff. We have Delta 8, Delta 9, Delta 10. Delta 9 and Delta 10 are — typically they are synthesized or synthetic cannabinoids, and these kids are getting a potent amount of marijuana quickly because this liquid is vaporizing, heating up, and it is causing overdose-like symptoms,” Barbrey said.

    He added that without age restrictions in law, a 12-year-old can legally buy these unregulated vapes in some outlets. “You have to be 21 to buy tobacco, right? But these vapes are unregulated. There’s no age as far as the legislation goes.”

    The lack of regulation also limits prosecutorial and juvenile petition options. “We can’t do anything with juvenile petitions because it is not regulated,” Barbrey said. He described the strain on families when students are suspended while also being taken by ambulance for vomiting or hallucinations.

    Woodard said the problem has grown over years. “I think we have got about 40 cases in the last year. Not all of them are overdoses, but where kids have been found with vapes. Not necessarily saying that it has the substance,” he said. All overdoses are investigated by the sheriff’s drug unit.

    To document potency, the WCSO purchased items and paid a private accredited lab for analysis using special funds, Barbrey said. “The Wilson County Sheriff’s Office, the taxpayers of Wilson County, have to pay to have these vapes tested because our crime lab doesn’t test for potency,” he said.

    Calls for legislative action and parental vigilance

    Woodard and Barbrey urged lawmakers to act. “They need to step up and look into what is happening with our kids,” Woodard said. He acknowledged parents work hard and expect schools to be safe, and called for “some strong teeth on these vape shops and some kind of regulation.”

    Barbrey suggested legislators could begin by setting an age requirement for vape purchases. Other states have regulated hemp-derived THC products; North Carolina law currently does not.

    Woodard noted there are 43 vape shops in Wilson County and said THC products are also sold at gas stations. Barbrey added that a single vape cartridge typically sells for $50 or $55, and students sometimes resell hits in school bathrooms for $10 or $15 each.

    Woodard said some stores may be using juveniles to sell the products and that juvenile petitions could follow. “We are letting the owners know that ‘Hey, you need to be mindful of what you are selling. If you are mindful of what you are selling, it doesn’t need to be sold here.’ We have got a duty to protect our kids.”

    He urged parents to be vigilant at home as well: “They are going to have to be mindful of what their kids are doing, find these items and get them out of the house, question their children and talk to their children. Without that piece, the kid is still going to continue to do it, and peer pressure is strong. It is strong in these schools.”

  • Officials: Wayne Mans Used Fake Documents to Scam Vape Shop Investors

    I can rewrite it — please paste the full article text you want reworked.

    In the meantime, here are two engaging headline options that preserve the original meaning:
    – “Officials: Wayne Mans Used Fake Documents to Scam Vape Shop Investors”
    – “Vape Shop Investors Duped by Wayne Mans’ Phony Documents, Authorities Say”

  • Suspect Still on the Run After Late-Night Armed Robbery at Norwalk Smoke Shop, Officials Say

    NORWALK, Conn. (WFSB) — Norwalk police are investigating an armed robbery that occurred Saturday night.

    Around 11:27 p.m., officers responded to the Mohegan Smoke Shop on North Main Street after a robbery was reported, the department said. A store employee told police a man entered the shop, displayed a handgun and took cash before fleeing the scene.

    Officers searched nearby areas but have not located the suspect. No further details were released.

    Anyone with information is asked to contact the Norwalk Police Department at 203-854-3031 or email JBarron@norwalkct.gov.

    Eyewitness News will provide updates as they become available.

    Copyright 2025 WFSB. All rights reserved.


    This article was adapted from an original report published on wfsb.com. All rights belong to the original publisher.

  • 2 Arrested After Police Raid Richmond-Area Vape Shops and Other Locations, Seize Marijuana

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    If you’d like, here’s a more engaging version of the title while we wait for the article:
    “Two Arrested After Richmond-Area Vape Shops, Other Sites Raided in Marijuana Probe — WRIC ABC 8News”

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  • Police Raid Clay Market Vape Shop — Two Arrested

    Headline: Two arrested after searches at Clay Market vape shop, WTVR reports

    Rewritten content: Police conducted searches at the Clay Market vape shop and arrested two people, WTVR.com reports.