Las Vegas Review-Journal

Flavored tobacco sales banned

Supreme Court clears way for Calif. measure to take effect

- By David G. Savage

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a last-minute plea from the tobacco industry and cleared the way for California to enforce a statewide ban on the sale of most flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes.

The court’s action has the effect of upholding a measure passed by the Legislatur­e in 2020, which in turn was approved by 63 percent of voters in November. It is due to take effect next week.

The outcome is a victory for anti-tobacco advocates who called for cracking down on e-cigarettes and eliminatin­g youth-friendly flavors such as bubble gum, cotton candy and cherry that could lure kids to use tobacco.

California joins Massachuse­tts and New York in prohibitin­g the sale of flavored tobacco.

The tobacco industry spent heavily on lobbying and ad campaigns to defeat the California legislatio­n and the subsequent ballot measure.

When that failed, the industry sued to stop or delay the measure. The industry’s lawyers argued the state ban conflicted with a law adopted by Congress in 2009 authorizin­g federal regulation of tobacco products.

The tobacco companies lost before U.S. District Judge Dale Fischer in Los Angeles and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on the grounds that the law preserved the authority of states and localities to prohibit the sale of tobacco products.

Los Angeles, San Francisco and Sacramento have already adopted local bans on flavored tobacco.

Washington attorney Noel Francisco filed an emergency appeal with Justice Elena Kagan on Nov.

29, asking her and the high court to stop California’s statewide ban from taking effect.

“An injunction will preserve the decades-old status quo, thereby allowing this court time to decide the merits without letting loose the grave irreparabl­e harm that California’s law will inflict,” he wrote in R.J. Reynolds Tobacco vs. Bonta. Without such an order, he said, the tobacco companies “will be shut out of one of the nation’s largest markets for flavored tobacco products.”

Kagan, who oversees appeals from the 9th Circuit, asked for a response from California Attorney General Rob Bonta, which was filed last Tuesday.

Bonta noted that no judge has agreed with the tobacco industry’s claims, and said it is time for “allowing the will of the voters to take effect, as opposed to preserving a status quo that imperils the health of more young people in California with each passing day.”

Kagan referred the RJR appeal to the full court, which issued a brief order denying it without comment and with no dissents.

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