US Marshals Seized Vapes Worth$700,000 in Warehouse Raid: FDA Claimed
May 02, 2024In a warehouse in Alhambra, California, the U.S. Marshals Service, working on behalf of the FDA and Department of Justice, seized over 45,000 "unauthorized e-cigarettes." The FDA predicts that the confiscated goods are valued at about $703,000.
According to an FDA news release , although the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the FDA have collaborated in the past, this is the first time the DOJ has used the Marshals Service to assist in the seizure of vaping (or tobacco) items. Why armed law enforcement officials were required to confiscate vaping goods is unknown.
FDA Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) Director Brian King said, "FDA has been unequivocally clear that we are dedicated to using every one of our enforcement tools—including seizures—to hold individuals who peddle unauthorized e-cigarettes accountable."
FDA Focuses on "Brands Appealing to Youth."
Although the action took place after April 5, when the FDA filed a civil forfeiture case in the Central California U.S. District Court on behalf of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles, the date of the seizure is unclear.
The MDM Group, doing business as Eliquidstop.com, was the primary objective of the FDA action against the vape distributor. However, during the search, "the agencies were informed whether multiple companies may have an ownership interest" in the confiscated items. The other businesses with an interest in the confiscated goods have not been identified by the FDA.
In comparison to the last FDA seizure that was made public, the quantity of items that were confiscated was very less. Employees of the FDA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection made 1.4 million vape device seizures at Los Angeles International Airport in that activity, which is more than thirty times the number of devices that were taken during the Alhambra raid.
According to the FDA, the majority of the items found in the California warehouse were disposable vapes , with "youth-appealing brands such as Puff Bar/Puff, Elf Bar/EB Design, Esco Bar, Kuz, Smok, and Pixi" among them.
The Fda's Whack-A-Mole Battle Over Vapes Ramps Up
Only seven e-liquid-based vaping devices have received FDA approval (six are still on the market); they are all limited to tobacco tastes and are not well-liked by the millions of adult Americans who use e-cigarettes. Big tobacco firms manufacture every vaping product that has received FDA approval. Millions of premarket tobacco applications (PMTAs) have been denied by the agency, driving away a large number of businesses and compelling others to file federal court appeals of FDA marketing denial orders (MDOs). Since Brian King became the CTP director over two years ago, the FDA has approved no new vaping goods, no bottled e-liquid, and no product in a flavor other than tobacco.
The FDA has issued three rounds of warning letters (80 in all) and civil money penalties for 22 more shops—all actions against sales of disposable vapes—since Vapor Boss last reported on an enforcement action pertaining to vapes (civil money penalties imposed to 21 retailers in late January).
The FDA claims that since it started enforcing laws against vaping makers and retailers, it has filed more than 150 civil money penalty lawsuits and issued around 1,220 warning letters. In addition, it requested a permanent injunction to close six small vape shops in 2022 and one more the previous year.
The tobacco giants R.J. Reynolds and Altria Group, who have continued their own campaigns to eradicate disposable vapes and independent e-cigarette manufacturers or pass state PMTA registry laws that ban the competition's products, have assisted the agency in kicking up its whack-a-mole war against disposable products into high gear last year. The increased retail rivalry from "unauthorized" disposable vapes is the reason the tobacco firms have lost momentum in recent years.