Category: Around the Industry

  • Cigar Lounge Sues City Over 15-Minute Smoking Limit

    Cigar Lounge Sues City Over 15-Minute Smoking Limit

    Anthony’s Pipe & Cigar Lounge filed a lawsuit against the city of Minneapolis for a law it passed last year that put a 15-minute time limit on cigar smoking in tobacco shops. Representatives of Anthony’s say the law seems targeted, as Anthony’s is the only shop in the city where indoor smoking is allowed.

    According to 2007’s Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act, customers are permitted to smoke cigars in licensed indoor areas “for the specific purpose of sampling tobacco products.” The state did not define “sampling.” Minnesota is a local authority state in regards to tobacco control, meaning local municipalities are granted the authority to create local ordinances. Last year, Minneapolis decided to define “sampling” as 15 minutes of smoking.

    Hadi Aboumourad, the owner of Anthony’s, and his lawyer, John Sperry, recently filed a lawsuit against the city, hoping it will repeal the ordinance.

    “It’s without any demonstrable health benefit that avoids secondhand smoke exposure to non-smokers, which is a fundamental purpose of the Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act,” Sperry told Cigar Aficionado. “We see that [the 15-minute sampling window] as a death by a thousand cuts.

    “They can’t outright ban something that the state statute clearly permits and expresses as an exemption. Fifteen minutes of sampling and then prohibiting it after 15 minutes is still a prohibition of sampling, right?”

    Sperry told Cigar Aficionado that despite going into effect last December, the city ordinance has not actually been enforced yet, and the city assured him they would not enforce the ordinance unless a complaint is made. Sperry requested a temporary injunction on the ordinance while the lawsuit plays out, making the ordinance unenforceable while the lawsuit works its way through the court. A hearing is set to decide on the temporary injunction on May 29.

  • Meerapfel Offering Supports PCA Advocacy

    Meerapfel Offering Supports PCA Advocacy

    Meerapfel Cigar announced the launch of its 2025 Création Liberté, a special premium cigar blend created to support cigar rights movements and advocacy groups worldwide. Proceeds from this year’s brand will be donated to the Premium Cigar Association’s (PCA) Industry Defense Fund, which supports the association’s ongoing advocacy efforts.

    “We are grateful for the opportunity to collaborate with the Meerapfel team on Création Liberté and have the honor of being the recipient of proceeds from the sale of this unique product this year,” Joshua Habursky, executive director of the PCA, said. “The cigar is a symbol of our mission, and the proceeds will support our advocacy efforts.”

    Création Liberté 2025 is hand rolled exclusively in a 6 x 50 Toro vitola and features a vintage Cameroon wrapper, a signature “sacred leaf” grown by the Meerapfel family. It is presented in a Paulownia-wood chest that holds two cigars. Only 613 of these sets are being released globally. Each Création Liberté 2025 set has a suggested retail price of $249.

     “The greatest threat to our industry is the one that we have been facing over the past years: the threat of regulation,” said company head Jeremiah E. Meerapfel. “Thank goodness we have organizations such as the PCA that stand up for the consumers, the manufacturers, and the farmers. They do the dirty work: Educating and reminding our leadership of the importance of premium cigars for our societies and quality of life. It is people such as the PCA members that help us defend our craft and the future generations of our industry. We are eternally grateful. This is our tradition, and we will fight to protect it.”

  • Iowa Judge Halts Law that Would Pull Vapes from Shelves

    Iowa Judge Halts Law that Would Pull Vapes from Shelves

    A Federal District Court for the Southern District of Iowa sided with e-cigarette industry plaintiffs in a preliminary ruling against the state, temporarily halting the enforcement of the state’s PMTA registration law. On May 3, Chief Judge Stephanie Rose issued a temporary stay on HF 2677, which would have required vape products to have marketing authorization from the Food and Drug Administration between 2016 and 2020 in order to be sold in Iowa.

    “As the plaintiff alleges, Congress intended to concentrate enforcement authority on the FDA in Section 337(a) of the FDCA, aiming to prevent states from adopting inconsistent enforcement methods that would undermine the federal regulatory system,” Rose said in the ruling. “Iowa acknowledges that the legislative motive is the ‘absence of federal enforcement,’ which reflects why Congress has granted such enforcement powers to the federal government.”

    The bill was passed by the state legislature in April 2024 and signed by the governor in May, with an effective date set for February 2025. The Attorney General of Iowa agreed to temporarily pause enforcement of the law, awaiting the court’s decision on the preliminary injunction after the Iowa State E-cigarette Industry Association filed a lawsuit in December, which claimed the state’s policy would hurt local businesses and lead to vaping products being pulled from the shelves.

    The court ruled that the Iowa law “impermissibly intrudes upon the federal government’s exclusive authority” to enforce the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which ensures that food, medicine, cosmetics, and medical devices are safe and properly labeled.

    “It’s definitely a win in the right direction,” said Ashley Hartman, chief strategy officer for Central Iowa Vapors. “It essentially would have shut our stores down. There’s only 26 products that are currently approved on the registry federally and so that would have completely wiped away everything in our stores.”

    The ruling holds extra significance in that the Vapor Technology Association plans to apply for a preliminary injunction next week in a similar registration bill in North Carolina. The Iowa ruling could provide a legal precedent for other states facing similar lawsuits regarding PMTA registration laws.

  • New Zealand Unlikely to Meet Smokefree Goal 

    New Zealand Unlikely to Meet Smokefree Goal 

    Smokefree 2025 was adopted in New Zealand in 2011 with the goal of reducing the nation’s smoking rate to below 5% going into 2026. Public health researchers say there is little chance of it happening, as 82,000 people would have to quit smoking before the end of the year.

    The latest data from the Annual Health Survey shows there are currently 300,000 daily smokers in the country, and University of Otago Research Fellow Calvin Cochran says to meet the Smokefree goal by New Year’s Eve, 27% of those people would need to quit. He says the government initiative providing free vape ‘starter’ kits to smokers wanting to stop will help fewer than 500, according to his team’s research.

    Last year, the Coalition government repealed three areas of Smokefree law, including denicotinization of tobacco products and banning the sale of tobacco products to those born after January 1, 2009.

  • FDA Scores Win, but Industry Eyes PMTA Denial Challenge

    FDA Scores Win, but Industry Eyes PMTA Denial Challenge

    On April 2, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in the Wages and White Lion Investments (d/b/a Triton Distribution) Premarket Tobacco Product Application (PMTA) Marketing Denial Order (MDO) challenge. In a 9-0 unanimous ruling, the Supreme Court held that the FDA did not act arbitrarily and capriciously when it denied the PMTA for Triton’s flavored electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) under the “fatal flaw” review standard. While the decision reaffirmed the deference owed to FDA under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), at least with respect to the agency’s ability to change its position on PMTA requirements, the Court left open several critical issues, including whether the agency committed a potentially prejudicial error by failing to consider applicants’ marketing plans, according to an article published by Keller and Heckman LLP.

    “As previously reported, Triton’s MDO challenge in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit attracted significant attention within the vaping industry’s broader efforts to secure market access for flavored ENDS products,” Keller and Heckman wrote. “In the lead-up to the Supreme Court’s review, numerous manufacturers had filed petitions in circuit courts across the country challenging FDA’s issuance of boilerplate MDOs for millions of flavored ENDS products. To date, FDA has denied or refused virtually all (>99%) of applications for flavored ENDS products and has only authorized two menthol-flavored products. The MDO appeals yielded conflicting outcomes: the Fifth and Eleventh Circuit held that certain MDOs were arbitrary and capricious under the APA, while the D.C., Second, Third, Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits upheld the denials. The Supreme Court’s decision to review Triton’s case was widely regarded as pivotal for the regulated industry, public health stakeholders, and FDA, as it promised to resolve the circuit split.”

    Justice Samuel Alito’s narrowly focused 46-page opinion ultimately fell short of the broader expectations many in the industry had for the Court’s review. Rather than addressing the full range of legal and regulatory questions raised by the parties, the Supreme Court confined its analysis to the APA’s “change-in-position” doctrine—specifically, whether FDA had assured applicants like Triton, through its guidance documents and other public statements, that it would apply one evidentiary standard, only to apply a different one during PMTA review. As Justice Alito framed it, the question was whether FDA “told [Triton] in guidance documents that it would do one thing and then turned around and did something different.” While the ruling provided clarity on this narrow issue, it left several critical questions unresolved.

    “Although the ruling was unanimous for FDA with respect to whether the agency arbitrarily changed its position on the PMTA requirements for flavored products, the Supreme Court avoided addressing several significant APA and constitutional issues raised in both the parties’ and amici briefs,” Keller and Heckman wrote. “The Court did not address, for example, the constitutional right to due process or the applicability of the major questions doctrine. Nor did it engage in a deeper examination of FDA’s PMTA review process, sidestepping key concerns such as the absence of appropriate tobacco-flavored comparators for companies like Triton, or the lack of clarity regarding the level of benefit required to satisfy the agency’s comparative efficacy standard. Although it vacated the en banc decision, the Supreme Court has remanded the case back to the Fifth Circuit, specifically to consider whether FDA’s refusal to consider Triton’s marketing plans during the application review process was a harmless error, especially given FDA’s prior characterization of such marketing plans as being ‘critical’ to the PMTA.

    “The remand focusing on FDA’s failure to consider Triton’s marketing plans takes on added weight in light of the Eleventh Circuit’s 2022 decision in Bidi Vapor LLC v. FDA, where the court held that a similar omission by the agency rendered the MDO arbitrary and capricious. Furthermore, the Supreme Court declined to reach (and expressed no view on) Triton’s argument that FDA erred in evaluating its PMTA under standards developed in adjudication rather than standards promulgated in notice-and-comment rulemaking. The Fifth Circuit’s resolution of these issues could have sweeping implications for how FDA must evaluate future PMTAs and respond to procedural challenges under the APA. The remand also presents the vaping industry with a renewed opportunity to advance alternative administrative law claims in a court that has historically viewed FDA’s approach to flavored ENDS products with skepticism.”

    Whether these challenges move forward, however, may ultimately depend on FDA’s litigation strategy under a new Administration that has forced out many of the leaders and staff at the FDA Center for Tobacco Products, and previously signaled support for flavored vaping products. All eyes now turn to the Fifth Circuit, as both sides consider their next moves in this closely watched case.

  • Radloff Tabbed to Head USTC

    Radloff Tabbed to Head USTC

    The U.S. Tobacco Cooperative’s (USTC) board of directors appointed Ron Radloff as president and Chief Executive Officer. Most recently serving as senior vice president of operations, Radloff joined USTC in July 2016 as the director of finance at USTC’s manufacturing operations, U.S. Flue Cured Tobacco Growers, and has held a variety of positions at USFC, including director of manufacturing and operations. Before joining USTC, Radloff served as a controller for Mohawk Industries, assistant controller of Daltile, and held engineering and finance positions with Norfolk Southern and IBM.

    “Ron brings fresh experience and leadership to guide us forward,” Danny Watkins, USTC chairman, said. “At U.S. Tobacco Cooperative, we take great pride in our longstanding commitment to excellence. Ron is poised to uphold and build upon that standard.”

  • Off-Stamp Adds Ice-Cube to Vape Lineup

    Off-Stamp Adds Ice-Cube to Vape Lineup

    Today (May 1), Off-Stamp launched Ice-Cube, the latest pod added to its flagship X-Cube kit. The pods and the matching kits will be available for sale on BestVape.com starting today.

    The Ice-Cube is designed with an adjustable cooling experience, offering personalized three-tiered sensations. The side button allows cooling level adjustment that offers different sensations. The pod features an 18 ml e-liquid capacity, bringing up to 25,000 puffs for long-lasting enjoyment.

    The line offers 10 flavors: four mint-based and six mixed fruity blends.

  • No Saint Latest Vape Offered in UK

    No Saint Latest Vape Offered in UK

    No Saint is a new vaping brand and technology platform launching in the UK today (May 1), offering what the company says is “a sophisticated, safer alternative that prioritizes quality, innovation, and responsibility.” Mladen Barbaric created the product and said he raised $50 million in funding from companies like Coca-Cola, Vitamin Water, and Patron, as well as health and wellness activist investors, such as HumanCo and Jason Karp.

    “Built with cutting-edge technology and premium ingredients, No Saint’s vaporizer can last up to two years and eliminates hazardous flavors and harmful chemicals found in many existing brands,” the company said in a press release. “This offers adults a safer, more refined vaping experience, with zero heavy metals and relentlessly tested formulations and emissions. The brand is also committed to transparency, publishing all its chemical analysis and emissions data that ensures the safest way to vape.”

    “We saw a big gap in the market for a responsible and premium vaping experience, so we set out to create a product that prioritizes quality, refinement, and safety,” said Barbaric. “No Saint offers a grown-up approach to vaping, delivering superior taste, cleaner emissions, and an overall more responsible alternative to traditional smoking, bringing some much-needed taste to the game.”

    The No Saint will be available to purchase at nosaint.co, two company stores in London, and at 500 independent retailers across London and the South East.

  • Black Buffalo Tabs Booth as Chief Legal Officer

    Black Buffalo Tabs Booth as Chief Legal Officer

    Black Buffalo Inc. announced the appointment of Kellsi Booth as its Chief Legal Officer. Booth joins the Black Buffalo executive team with over a decade of experience in heavily regulated industries, with a focus on nicotine and tobacco. Most recently, she served as Vice President of Quality Assurance and Regulatory Affairs at Turning Point Brands, where she oversaw regulatory strategy and compliance for a portfolio of established consumer brands, including Zig-Zag and Stoker’s. Prior to that, she held a series of progressive roles at Juul Labs, Inc., where she drove initiatives in regulatory, quality, and policy matters.

    “Kellsi brings an unmatched depth of experience in regulatory affairs, legal strategy, and quality oversight,” said Matthew Hanson, Chief Growth Officer of Black Buffalo. “Her leadership will be pivotal as we continue our responsible, rapid growth within leading retail chains across the United States.”

    Booth has built a career navigating complex regulatory frameworks and advocating for responsible innovation within the industry. She is actively involved in several industry trade associations, including the Coalition of Manufacturers of Smoking Alternatives, and serves as one of the co-founders and board members of OWNiT (Organization of Women in Nicotine & Tobacco) — an initiative dedicated to empowering women across the nicotine and tobacco space.

  • Study: Charcoal-Free Shisha Significantly Less Harmful

    Study: Charcoal-Free Shisha Significantly Less Harmful

    In what the company calls “the world’s first charcoal-free shisha product,” OOKA announced the results of a study conducted by ASL Analytic Service Laboratory GmbH in Germany that found emissions from its heated system showed zero detection of many of the most harmful by-products of combustion, including carbon monoxide, benzene, toluene, and benzo[a]pyrene – substances typically found in both cigarettes and charcoal-heated shisha. The peer-reviewed study was published today (April 30) in Nature’s Scientific Reports

    “As the first electronically heated shisha system, OOKA represents a major advancement in inhalation technology, providing a charcoal-free, smoke-free experience without compromising flavor or ritual,” the company said in a press release. “The product’s multi-patented design eliminates combustion-related toxicants while offering consumers a consistent and premium experience.

    “The study provides substantive new evidence that OOKA is a breakthrough in harm reduction, delivering one of the cleanest inhalation experiences currently available without any compromise on flavor and experience for users

    The study tested emissions from OOKA across 37 toxicants and showed that emissions of key aldehydes—including acrolein, acetaldehyde, and formaldehyde—were reduced by up to 96% in the charcoal-free device compared to traditional shisha. When typical real-world consumption is factored in, toxicant exposure was estimated to be up to 100 times lower than cigarette smoking.

    “These findings have significant implications, not just for public health but also for shisha regulation and consumer understanding,” Dr. Ian Fearon, study co-author and a leading global expert in the scientific basis for tobacco harm reduction, said. “Misconceptions around waterpipe use have gone unchallenged for too long, and studies like this help bring clarity and credible data to a rapidly evolving category.”

    OOKA is one of six shisha/hookah brands under AIR (Advanced Inhalation Rituals).