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Contact: Patty McQuillan
Date: July 1, 2005
Phone: (919) 733-5027 x232


ALE AGENTS ARREST FOURTEEN CLERKS FOR TOBACCO SALES TO MINORS  

 

GREENSBORO – During the month of June, six N.C. Alcohol Law Enforcement agents checked 75 retail establishments in Alamance, Guilford, Moore, Randolph and Richmond counties and arrested fourteen store clerks for selling tobacco to underage children.

As part of a statewide Tobacco Compliance Check Campaign, ALE agents issued a criminal citation to each of the store clerks who were allegedly in violation of the law by selling cigars, cigarettes, snuff or bulk tobacco to customers who were younger than 18 years-old.

“Because of these periodic checks, tobacco sales to minors have dropped in North Carolina from 50 percent to 15 percent since the start of the campaign three years ago,” said ALE Director Mike Robertson. “Retail outlets are taking these compliance checks more seriously and are doing a better job of training their store clerks to ensure they are complying with state tobacco laws.”

A store clerk can quickly identify an under-aged person by the color of his or her driver’s license. A red border means the customer is under 18 years of age and is prohibited from purchasing alcohol and tobacco products.

Statistics show that more than 200,000 kids under the age of 18 will die prematurely from smoking; 90 percent of adult smokers in North Carolina began using cigarettes before age 18; and the average age that people start smoking is 13. Tobacco use has long been called a gateway drug and experts say the escalation from the use of tobacco products to other drugs increases the likelihood of a young person’s activity with theft or other criminal activities.

ALE's Tobacco Education and Compliance Check Program is conducted in partnership with the Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services and the North Carolina Health and Wellness Trust Fund Commission. It is also a cooperative effort among community agencies, local law enforcement agencies, merchants, parents, and teens.

ALE has 76 agents across North Carolina who enforce alcohol and tobacco laws.

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