Category: Around the Industry

  • Cannabis Co. Countersues Competitor for AI-Fabricated Extortion

    Cannabis Co. Countersues Competitor for AI-Fabricated Extortion

    Leafwell Inc. filed a federal lawsuit against fellow medical marijuana company My Florida Green, alleging its competitor used artificial intelligence to fabricate legal claims as part of an extortion scheme designed to damage Leafwell’s business. The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida last week.

    According to the complaint, My Florida Green allegedly filed a factually and legally deficient lawsuit in September, accusing Leafwell of unlawful business practices, then used the litigation to pressure the company to settle the lawsuit, scare off business partners, and otherwise harm Leafwell’s operations. Leafwell claims the filings were AI-generated and lacked proper factual and legal grounding.

    According to Justia Law, the court is scrutinizing the original filings, highlighting the growing business and legal risks tied to the misuse of AI in litigation and competitive disputes, particularly in highly regulated sectors like medical cannabis.

  • CAA Elects Terry Gallagher as New Chairman

    CAA Elects Terry Gallagher as New Chairman

    The Cigar Association of America (CAA) announced that Terry Gallagher, Jr., president of Smoker Friendly tobacco outlets, has been elected chairman of the association, succeeding Javier Estades. Gallagher, Jr. brings decades of experience in the premium cigar and tobacco sectors and assumes leadership as the association continues its advocacy and industry-support efforts.

    CAA president Scott Pearce praised Estades for his nine years of service, during which the association strengthened federal and state advocacy, expanded policymaker engagement, and became a leading voice on tobacco issues. Estades will remain on the Board.

    The Board also elected new officers: Eric Newman (Vice Chair), Carrie Freed (Treasurer), and Henry Roemer (Secretary). Gallagher, Jr. emphasized collaboration with the leadership team to advance cigar-specific regulation, protect adult consumers, and preserve the heritage of premium cigars.

  • Great Wall Cigar Explores Partnerships with Cuba, Morocco, Indonesia

    Great Wall Cigar Explores Partnerships with Cuba, Morocco, Indonesia

    A delegation from China Tobacco Sichuan’s Great Wall Cigar Factory recently visited the embassies of Cuba, Morocco, and Indonesia in Beijing to discuss industrial cooperation and trade expansion.

    At the Cuban embassy, talks with Minister Counsellor Igor Montero Brito focused on collaboration in tobacco breeding, processing technology, and cultural exchange. The Cuban official highlighted cigars as a national symbol comparable to China’s silk and porcelain.

    In Morocco, discussions centered on leveraging the country’s strategic location to create a regional hub for cigar processing and distribution. In Indonesia, the delegation received confirmation of a recent commercial order, reflecting growing bilateral trade. Great Wall Cigar holds about 50% of China’s handmade cigar market and nearly 70% of its high-end segment, exporting to 28 countries.

  • Sweden Nears Milestone as Europe’s First ‘Smoke-Free’ Nation

    Sweden Nears Milestone as Europe’s First ‘Smoke-Free’ Nation

    Sweden’s smoking rate is in decline this year, putting it on track to become Europe’s first smoke-free country, ready to eclipse the World Health Organization’s 5% threshold, according to Gulf News. Last year, its daily smoking rate fell to 5.2%, a sharp decline from 15% in 2005, credited to long-running public health campaigns and the widespread switch to lower-risk nicotine products such as snus and tobacco-free pouches.

    About 18% of Swedes now use snus or similar products, which, though not risk-free, experts say are far less harmful than cigarettes. Over the past decade, daily smoking has dropped 55%, accompanied by a 38% fall in tobacco-related deaths among men and a 41% decline in lung cancer cases.

    Public health specialists say Sweden’s blend of regulation, clear messaging, and safer alternatives—backed by high social trust—offers a potential roadmap for other nations working to cut smoking rates.

  • Restricting Vapes Drives Smokers Back to Cigarettes: Opinion

    Restricting Vapes Drives Smokers Back to Cigarettes: Opinion

    A new commentary by Markus Lindblad, Head of External Affairs at Haypp Group, warns that parts of the UK’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill could backfire by driving some adults back to smoking. The bill, one of the world’s toughest anti-tobacco measures, includes a generational smoking ban for anyone born after 1 January 2009, new licensing rules, and tighter advertising limits. But Lindblad argues that proposed powers to restrict vape and nicotine-product flavors risk undermining the country’s smoke-free ambitions.

    “Flavors aren’t just a marketing tool; they are a behavioral and psychological aid that help smokers make the transition away from cigarettes,” Lindblad said. “When a smoker switches to vaping, the experience of flavor, combined with the absence of smoke and tar, creates a sense of progress and separation from the old habit. Removing that variety reduces satisfaction, increases relapse risk, and ultimately undermines harm-reduction goals.”

    Citing recent U.S. research, he says multiple large-scale studies show that state-level flavor bans reduce vaping but also lead to measurable increases in cigarette use. One JAMA study found that flavor restrictions were followed by higher smoking rates, while a 2024 analysis of 376,963 young adults reported a 3.6-point drop in daily vaping alongside a 2.2-point rise in daily smoking. Yale researchers similarly linked flavor bans to declining vape sales and rising cigarette sales across 44 states.

    Haypp’s own UK survey found that nearly one-third of vapers cite taste as a key advantage of vaping, and 28% say flavor is their top purchasing factor. When asked how they would respond to a flavor ban, almost a quarter said they would return to smoking — a result Lindblad says should concern public-health officials. He concludes that rather than banning flavors, policymakers should strengthen age checks, tighten marketing rules, and improve labeling — measures aimed at youth access without limiting options for adults trying to quit smoking.

  • VELO, McLaren Unveil Fan-Created Livery for Abu Dhabi GP

    VELO, McLaren Unveil Fan-Created Livery for Abu Dhabi GP

    VELO and the McLaren Formula 1 Team have unveiled a special, fan-created livery for the 2025 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Designed by nine McLaren superfans from around the world, the livery features bespoke icons inspired by personal memories, team milestones, and McLaren’s broader community spirit.

    VELO, McLaren Unveil Fan-Created Livery for Abu Dhabi GP

    VELO and the McLaren Formula 1 Team have unveiled a special, fan-created livery for the 2025 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Designed by nine McLaren superfans from around the world, the livery features bespoke icons inspired by personal memories, team milestones, and McLaren’s broader community spirit.

    The project is part of the “Live Your Fandom” campaign, which has delivered unique fan experiences throughout the season. In August, the selected superfans visited the McLaren Technology Centre for a behind-the-scenes tour, a design workshop, and sessions with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown and driver Lando Norris—where they unknowingly helped shape the final livery.

    “VELO is proud to celebrate these experiences that allow fans to embrace their own unique fandom as part of a community,” said Luca Angiolillo, Global Head of Partnerships at BAT, “and we can’t wait to see this special fan-driven takeover take center stage at the season finale.” In August, the selected superfans visited the McLaren Technology Centre for a behind-the-scenes tour, a design workshop, and sessions with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown and driver Lando Norris—where they unknowingly helped shape the final livery.

    “VELO is proud to celebrate these experiences that allow fans to embrace their own unique fandom as part of a community,” said Luca Angiolillo, Global Head of Partnerships at BAT, “and we can’t wait to see this special fan-driven takeover take center stage at the season finale.”

  • SGF Asks for Guidance on Nicotine Pouches

    SGF Asks for Guidance on Nicotine Pouches

    The Scottish Grocers’ Federation (SGF) reiterated its members’ commitment to responsible retailing in a letter to Health Secretary Wes Streeting, following reports of illegal high-strength nicotine pouches circulating in the UK. As the Tobacco and Vapes Bill progresses through Westminster, SGF said retailers still have no official guidance on best practices for selling nicotine pouches, despite expected age-restriction measures. The group warned that it is often unclear which products entering the UK supply chain meet appropriate quality standards.

    SGF chief executive Pete Cheema said industry and government should work together to develop “clear, standardized guidance” on pouch sales and promotion, stressing that pouches are an adult smoking-cessation tool and should never be marketed to children. The federation has also written to Scottish health secretary Neil Gray, seeking meetings with both governments.

  • FDA Launches Web-Based PMTA Forms

    FDA Launches Web-Based PMTA Forms

    Today (December 3), FDA launched web versions of four forms in CTP Portal Next Generation (CTP Portal NextGen) for applicants submitting and amending premarket tobacco product applications (PMTAs) and Substantial Equivalence (SE) Reports. FDA transitioned from CTP Portal to CTP Portal NextGen—a “new, improved web portal” for submitting tobacco product applications electronically—in early 2025. The web forms allow applicants to create, validate, and submit PMTA and SE Report submissions directly through CTP Portal NextGen.

    The web-based forms include Forms FDA 4057, 4057a, 3965, and 3965a. Industry stakeholders with active CTP Portal accounts had the option to test and provide feedback on the new web functionality of the forms during online development. Creating these web-based forms is part of FDA’s work to promote efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency to improve its tobacco product application review process.

    According to the FDA, the new portal includes step-by-step instructions on completing the forms; a more user-friendly interface that helps guide applicants through the submission process; the ability for multiple users to work on a submission at the same time and easily save drafts; and real-time, automatic validation, ensuring all required fields are completed before submission.

    PDF versions of FDA’s PMTA and SE Report forms will remain available for applicants who choose not to use the web-based versions. These PDFs can still be downloaded and submitted electronically through CTP’s Document Control Center or uploaded via eSubmitter. FDA has also released updated PDF versions of Forms 4057, 4057a, 3965, and 3965a, correcting minor technical issues since their original posting in June 2025. Beginning Jan. 2, 2026, applicants using PDF forms must use these updated versions. Failure to use the current forms — or to complete them correctly — will generally result in FDA refusing to accept the application.

  • J.C. Newman Restoring Part of Tampa’s Cigar Heritage

    J.C. Newman Restoring Part of Tampa’s Cigar Heritage

    J.C. Newman Cigar Company announced that the final phase of construction began last week on the historic Sanchez y Haya Hotel in Tampa’s Ybor City. Built in 1910, the building was once a hub for cigar workers, located across the street from J.C. Newman’s famed El Reloj factory, but has fallen into disrepair after decades of neglect.

    Now owned by J.C. Newman, the building has been structurally stabilized, stripped to its bones, cleared of a long-running bat infestation, and prepared for total revival. Backed by $18 million in public and private investment, including major support from Hillsborough County and Tampa’s CRA, it is scheduled to open as a boutique hotel and cigar destination in November 2026.

    J.C. Newman president Drew Newman said the project is a “responsibility and tribute to Tampa’s cigar story.”

    Click here to see coverage of the story on Tampa Bay’s Fox 13.

  • Supreme Court Told Cannabis Ban is Outdated

    Supreme Court Told Cannabis Ban is Outdated

    Two libertarian advocacy groups — the Cato Institute and Pacific Legal Foundation — filed amicus briefs supporting a petition in Canna Provisions Inc. v. Bondi/Garland, which asks the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider the federal marijuana ban under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). They argue that the Court’s 2005 ruling in Gonzales v. Raich, which upheld federal authority over intrastate cannabis activity, is outdated given widespread state legalization and shifting federal enforcement.

    A third group, the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, has also filed a brief urging the Court to take the case, claiming the CSA’s application to state-regulated, intrastate marijuana markets exceeds Congress’s commerce-clause powers.

    A recent federal appeals court decision rejecting a similar challenge reaffirmed that Raich remains controlling — underscoring that only the Supreme Court can revisit the precedent.

    The justices will consider the petition at their December 12 conference and announce on December 15 whether they will hear the case. A ruling limiting federal authority over intrastate cannabis activity could have broader implications for federal-state regulatory power, potentially affecting future oversight of nicotine products, heated tobacco, and other controlled substances.