Saturday, April 3, 2010

Divided appeals court rules on Philly's 'blunt' ban

A Philadelphia ordinance banning the sale of cigars and single cigarettes used by illegal drug-takers was upheld Monday by a divided appeals court.

The Commonwealth Court majority validated a January 2007 ban on flavored tobacco products and on cigarettes sold individually or in pairs, making them likely to be used for drugs.

But the court said it was permissible for the city to prohibit retailers from selling certain tobacco drug paraphernalia, such as hollowed-out cigars known as "blunts."

The difference is that the blunt-sales ban requires proof the seller knows or should know the cigars would be used for taking drugs, the court said. The ordinance's provisions on flavored tobacco and single cigarettes does not include that language.

A Philadelphia judge had previously ruled the ordinance was unenforceable and pre-empted by Pennsylvania's Controlled Substance Act.

The ordinance maintained that a retailer "can be held liable even if it does not know that the sale of a single cigarette or flavored cigar will result in the buyer using the tobacco product to inhale illegal drugs," wrote Commonwealth Court Judge Mary Hannah Leavitt.

"By contrast, the Controlled Substance Act exempts persons from liability who do not know, or cannot reasonably know, that the tobacco item being sold would be used by the buyer to ingest illegal drugs," she wrote.

Commonwealth Court also ruled that the city can ban the sale of certain tobacco products within 500 feet of a church or school, regardless of how they are intended to be used. City lawyers said they were studying the opinion and had not decided whether to appeal.

Lawyers for the tobacco businesses that sued the city and its Licenses and Inspections commissioner said they were unfamiliar with details about the decision or did not return phone messages.

Judge Rochelle S. Friedman wrote that she would have sided with the Philadelphia judge and invalidated the entire ordinance. Judges Renee Cohn Jubelirer and Doris A. Smith-Ribner said they would have upheld all aspects of the city law.

This being said, banning of "blunt' and "wraps" is the first step to banning these items across the U.S. and it sets a precedence that everyone knows that most people buying these items are possibly going to be used to smoke illegal drugs.

It's only a matter of time before we see other cities or states for that matter to follow suit!

I guess it's time for folks to step up their game and start smoking real cigars I guess!!!

Monday, February 1, 2010

Churchill cigar sells for £4,500 at auction in Norfolk

The cigar was picked up by a Downing Street staff member

A half-smoked cigar, abandoned when Sir Winston Churchill dashed away to an urgent wartime Cabinet meeting, has sold at auction for £4,500.

The ex-prime minister's cigar, picked up by a member of the 10 Downing Street staff 69 years ago, had been expected to fetch up to £350.

The 9.5cm (3.74ins) cigar, embossed with the owner's name, was sold by Keys auctioneers in Aylsham, Norfolk.
It was bought by a private collector from Hertfordshire.


After picking up the stub, Downing Street valet Nellie Goble grabbed a sheet of 10 Downing Street notepaper and scribbled a note to a friend.
She wrote: "To Jack, with all good wishes from Nellie. Just a small souvenir to remind you at some future date of one of the greatest men that ever lived in England."


"Jack" treasured the letter and cigar until his death in 1987 when it passed to his daughter.
The woman kept it wrapped in the note in a drawer at her north Norfolk home.
In November, a butter dish used as an ashtray by Churchill at the London dining and debating club he co-founded was sold at Keys for £4,200, almost three times its estimate.