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Title: Dear Race Baiters: Eric Garner’s Arrest Was Overseen By Black Sergeant Kizzy Adoni
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://downtrend.com/vsaxena/eric-g ... +downtrend+%28Downtrend.com%29
Published: Dec 5, 2014
Author: By V. Saxena
Post Date: 2014-12-05 20:26:50 by out damned spot
Keywords: Race Baiters, Garner, Arrest
Views: 14184
Comments: 28

Though a part of me genuinely wants to sympathize with the Eric Garner protesters, I cannot, for they keep trying to turn his death into a race issue. This greatly annoys me, especially given that according to information obtained by the Gateway Pundit, the officer who supervised Eric Garner’s arrest was a black sergeant by the name of Kizzy Adoni.

New York Daily News contributor Denis Hamill confirms this revelation:

Having that black sergeant in charge of that crime scene takes race out of the equation. As awful as Pantaleo’s actions appear on that video, at no time does that black sergeant order Pantaleo to stop choking Garner.

FYI, Pantaleo refers to NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, who was the one recorded putting Eric Garner in a choke-hold.

Anyway. Here’s some very sincere advice to Eric Garner supporters. If you care even an iota about the truth, then stop trying to turn these cases into race issues. By playing the race card, you only embarrass yourselves. You also annoy those of us who want to support you but remain too committed to the truth to prop up a blatant lie.

Speaking of which, you should also stop tying Eric Garner’s unfortunate demise to the death of proud strong-arm robber and thug Mike Brown.

Let me tell you something, folks. You got a chance right now to make a legitimate argument about bad laws and maybe even make a legitimate point about police take-down tactics. But if you choose to keep embracing the lies fed to you by scum like Reverend Al Sharpton, you will only push people away and inspire them to just tune you out:

*changes the channel*

Sorry for sounding so rude, but lies based on racial politics exasperate me! (1 image)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 23.

#1. To: All (#0)

out damned spot  posted on  2014-12-05   20:30:27 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: out damned spot (#1) (Edited)

http://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/new_yorkers_express_remorse_and_outrage_at_funeral_of_chokehold.jpg?w=720&h=480&crop=1

Not a chokehold: Truth of the Garner arrest

It wasn’t a chokehold.

That’s just the biggest single distortion in all the talk about the Eric Garner case, in which the public has been misinformed and misled from the start.

The Rev. Al Sharpton has never had to put himself in harm’s way to protect our streets against crime, as our police officers do every day. He’s in no way qualified to stand on his soapbox and dictate procedures.

I spent decades in law enforcement. During my time with the NYPD, I was responsible for over 1,400 felony arrests — any of which could’ve required the use of deadly physical force.

Volunteering to be a decoy cop in the 1970s, I was the victim of more than 500 muggings, about 30 of which injured me seriously enough that I was hospitalized. I wound up in countless physical situations and was always able to get the perp into cuffs.

Now, as owner of a security company here in the city, I consult for police departments across the country.

I’ve served as co-chairman of the National Crime Commission and chairman of the state Security Guard Advisory Council. I have extensive experience when it comes to police procedure, safety and security.

So I speak with some authority on the events surrounding Garner’s attempted arrest and death.

It’s tragic that a life was lost, but I’m outraged at how this incident is being used to hobble the NYPD.

The officers who approached Garner were responding to community complaints about his ongoing activities. When he grew uncooperative and resisted arrest, they followed protocol on taking him into custody.

Officers are required to be as quick as possible in getting a perpetrator into custody so that he has no chance to injure the officer, innocent bystanders or himself.

Garner was 6-foot-3 and 350 pounds. Using a headlock to bring down a man of that size was appropriate.

Headlocks are used in thousands of arrests each year, especially of individuals not cooperating with the police. I used the maneuver in dozens of arrests.

And it was a headlock, not a chokehold. To be a chokehold, there must be constant pressure on the person’s neck, compressing his windpipe or cutting off the flow of blood to the carotid artery, rendering him unconscious.

Watch the video: It’s obvious that the arresting officer put his arm around Garner’s neck to bring him to the ground — but once Garner was on the ground, he was still conscious and able to say he couldn’t breathe.

That’s when the officers called for medical back-up. Tragically, the EMS personnel failed to administer oxygen or to ascertain that Garner was asthmatic and use an inhaler to assist with his breathing.

A top medical examiner (who can’t publicly fault the city ME) tells me it was very irresponsible for the Medical Examiner’s Office to issue the press release stating that Garner’s death was caused by a chokehold (with asthma, heart disease and obesity as contributing factors) and ruling his death a homicide.

Two big points: 1) The final autopsy report hasn’t been released. We don’t have the full story, just headlines. 2) “Homicide” only means that one person has caused the death of another.

The term has no bearing on intent or recklessness. The ME’s press release only poured oil on an already fiery situation.

Again, it’s unfortunate that a life was lost — but to blame Garner’s death on the officers doing their job is ridiculous.

Whatever crime you’re accused of, whether selling untaxed cigarettes or murder, you must comply with an officer making a lawful arrest. (Anyone who believes he’s been unlawfully arrested can appeal to the well-oiled machine of the Civilian Complaint Review Board.)

It’s not your right to disregard an officer’s order.

Also note that the man credited with recording the Garner video was himself later arrested for gun possession, and had 26 priors.

This doesn’t discredit the video, but it does tell us that the neighborhood where the tragedy unfolded is dangerous. And the point of cracking down on “small” crimes like selling loosies is to keep the neighborhood from going further downhill.

Tell officers not to enforce “minor” laws, and the surrounding community will grow more dangerous. Yet that is exactly what the Rev. Sharpton is demanding — an end to “broken windows” policing.

I speak to patrol officers daily; they increasingly don’t want to get involved.

If you have to second-guess your actions in taking down an assailant, that second guess allows just enough time for the assailant to possibly get a gun out — and pose a deadly threat to you and to nearby civilians. We can’t ask our officers to walk on eggshells while protecting this city.

Yes, the NYPD can make some changes — do more training in the use of force and different techniques for effecting arrests, and in how to be more courteous when stopping, questioning or (when necessary, and it sometimes is) frisking a civilian.

But this is already the most professional urban police force in America. The mayor needs to start supporting his commissioner and his officers. They’ve earned it.

Nor was this tragic accident a racial incident. Police officers have no color.

They’re not black, white, Hispanic or whatever: They’re a cohesive group of men and women who put their life on the line every day for the protection of the law-abiding citizens of this great city.

Commissioner Bill Bratton is responsible for launching the drastic improvement in the safety of this city in the 1990s, safety we’ve come to take for granted today.

Listen to him, Mr. Mayor — and don’t ever again force him to take a public chastising from Al Sharpton on how to go about keeping this city safe.

If you instead bend to the pressure to further hobble the NYPD, you’ll soon have problems much worse than having Sharpton as your enemy.

Bo Dietl, a retired NYPD detective, is CEO of Beau Dietl & Associates.

Liberator  posted on  2014-12-06   12:41:33 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Liberator, out damned spot (#4)

Using a headlock to bring down a man of that size was appropriate.

Headlocks are used in thousands of arrests each year, especially of individuals not cooperating with the police. I used the maneuver in dozens of arrests.

And it was a headlock, not a chokehold. To be a chokehold, there must be constant pressure on the person’s neck, compressing his windpipe or cutting off the flow of blood to the carotid artery, rendering him unconscious.

Watch the video: It’s obvious that the arresting officer put his arm around Garner’s neck to bring him to the ground — but once Garner was on the ground, he was still conscious and able to say he couldn’t breathe.

I was a chokehold, not a headlock. Compare it to a chokehold in the UFC. To be a chokehold, it must be around the neck, not the head. It was. If applied properly and forcefully enough it will either cut off, or restrict either breathing or the blood supply to the brain.

It was an MMA style chokehold. A wrestling headlock it wasn't.

That’s when the officers called for medical back-up. Tragically, the EMS personnel failed to administer oxygen or to ascertain that Garner was asthmatic and use an inhaler to assist with his breathing.

A top medical examiner (who can’t publicly fault the city ME) tells me it was very irresponsible for the Medical Examiner’s Office to issue the press release stating that Garner’s death was caused by a chokehold (with asthma, heart disease and obesity as contributing factors) and ruling his death a homicide.

Tragically, the officers failed to notice that they had caused mortal injury.

... pursuant to the final diagnosis of the Office of Chief Medical Examiner of the City of New York included findings that the death was caused by the compression of the neck, compression of chest and the prone positioning of the decedent during physical restraint by police, petechial hemorrhages of palpebral conjunctivae and upper gingiva, hemorrhage of bulber conjunctivae and strap muscle hemorrhages of the neck due to the chokehold and pressure placed about his body causing him to be unable to breathe.

Notice of Claim, Estate of Eric Garner v City of New York et al, 6 Oct 2014, page 2.

http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/hannity/transcript/2014/12/04/dr-michael-baden-offers-insight-death-eric-garner

December 03, 2014

Dr. Michael Baden offers insight into death of Eric Garner

Guests: Dr. Michael Baden, Geraldo Rivera, Bo Dietl

This is a rush transcript from "Hannity," December 3, 2014. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.

SEAN HANNITY, HOST: And welcome back to "Hannity." This is a Fox News Alert. Earlier today, inside New York City's Grand Central Station, demonstrators staged a so-called "die-in" to protest the grand jury's decision not to indict the NYPD officer who placed Eric Garner in a headlock while attempting to arrest him.

[...]

BADEN: But I think the autopsy itself -- the medical examiner did a great job on this. There's 27 pages in the report. And the female (ph), she found that there were 10 hemorrhages on the inside of the neck, in the muscles of the neck, petechial hemorrhages in the eye, hemorrhage in the tongue. And those are all evidence of neck compression. You're right, chokehold has many different meanings in all. What we're concerned at autopsy is was there pressure on the neck.

HANNITY: Right.

BADEN: There was pressure on the neck and pressure on the chest.

HANNITY: I don't doubt it. This is a big guy.

BADEN: Pressure on the chest that interferes with the lungs expanding and --

HANNITY: But they also --

(CROSSTALK)

BADEN: And hands on the face and nose. So he couldn't breathe, and he was telling the truth.

HANNITY: But he was still talking does. That impact his ability to talk, if he can't breathe?

BADEN: Yes, no, you can say, I can't breathe.

HANNITY: You can.

BADEN: Absolutely.

HANNITY: But they also mention the fact that he was asthmatic, had heart disease and obesity.

BADEN: Right.

HANNITY: All right, so -- and it's a high-stress situation here.

BADEN: Right.

HANNITY: Here's -- here's where I want to ask you this question. I grant you, any arrest that's caught on videotape -- which, again, for a cigarette is insanity to me -- is going to look violent. But when we get to the legality here, if there is a technical difference and a very specific one about going for the carotid artery, going for the trache, and that being a chokehold illegal, versus a headlock legal, that's why -- I will argue that when we get the evidence in, that is where the grand jury made their distinction.

DIETL: We used to have night sticks. Remember the old nightsticks? We used to come up behind a guy and put it on and say -- that's a choke.

HANNITY: That's a choke.

DIETL: (INAUDIBLE) couple minutes, you get them down. My whole thing here is that cop never -- and that grand jury heard it -- he never left that day with any intentions of this man dying.

RIVERA: But no one is saying that.

DIETL: It's a terrible accident!

RIVERA: That's a fake argument.

http://cityofyonkerspolice.com/penal.law/article125.htm#p125.10

S 125.10 Criminally negligent homicide.

A person is guilty of criminally negligent homicide when, with criminal negligence, he causes the death of another person.

Criminally negligent homicide is a class E felony.

http://cityofyonkerspolice.com/penal.law/article15.htm#p15054

4. "Criminal negligence." A person acts with criminal negligence with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he fails to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that such result will occur or that such circumstance exists. The risk must be of such nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.

nolu chan  posted on  2014-12-06   19:05:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: nolu chan (#10)

I supposed "chokehold" and "headlock" remains a matter of interpretation -- the Doc's examination notwithstanding. What of it? Dietl's been there, done that.

LE have a hostile 350 lb giant who was reported to be a constant nuisance in the neighborhood, refusing to be compliant and openly challenging LE authority in public. In the real world of law and order, can't have that, Counselor. This is simple Common Sense 101 -- You do what you're told by SIX officers. You don't ignore them.

That said, yes, this 350 lbs fat pile of non-compliant crap DID have his neck compressed while in a headlock -- which can't be accomplished without also affecting the neck. No surprise there. It took what -- a half dozen officers to subdue this guy? Was he supposed to be clinically subdued according to an open manual? AND, exactly how was the PERP going to be subdued if THE PERP refused to comply?

IF Fatso was truly "choked out," he'd have passed out before muttering that he couldn't breathe. Perps, martial artists and wrestlers often get choke out then awaken. But because this stubborn, unhealthy, obese, parasitic rogue troublemaking POS nuisance was asthmatic...and somehow thought HE was going to dictate the law TO Law Enforcement, he paid the price for his idiocy, as Bo Dietl attests to.

Liberator  posted on  2014-12-07   0:34:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Liberator (#11)

You do what you're told by SIX officers. You don't ignore them.

Six.....to address a ticket/summons.

Command presence of just one might have enabled the handing of the ticket to this clown.

He'd been harassed by deblabios tax maids before. And maybe he was the sort of nuisance dickhead you see on the streets hawking stuff. And maybe he mouthed off to the initial contact. So what? Any street cop that can't handle being cursed should be manning the exit at walmart.

Give him his ticket and if he skips or FTA's then you make contact and arrest for that. Common sense protocol. I've dealt with borderline drunk and sometimes verbal disorderlies---no way possible to arrest them all here in SoCal----just no way---.....tough talk sometimes directed at me....i chuckle....tell em to f-off and follow the cite or face what's coming if they don't. Cooler heads probably as soon as I've turned the corner and nobody ends up on the ground over some pissy small incident that became out of control.

Bets are he "dissed" the initial who then asked for fill support so he/she could teach this boy a lesson.

Meanwhile---thanks to deblabios maids holder et al have yet another fake race thing to bleat about.

shoulda been a ticket and none of us would be hearing of it now.

e_type_jag  posted on  2014-12-07   20:25:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: e_type_jag, Liberator, nolu chan (#15)

Give him his ticket and if he skips or FTA's then you make contact and arrest for that.

shoulda been a ticket and none of us would be hearing of it now.

Small Businessman Murdered by Tax Enforcers (We're All Eric Garner Now)

Deckard  posted on  2014-12-08   9:05:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: Deckard, e_type_jag, Liberator (#17)

Laws of New York State, Consolidated Laws

NY TAX LAW, Article 37, Part 3, § 1814, Cigarette and tobacco products tax

    § 1814. Cigarette and tobacco products tax

      (a) Any person who willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat the taxes imposed by article twenty of this chapter or payment thereof on (i) ten thousand cigarettes or more (ii) twenty-two thousand cigars or more, or (iii) four hundred forty pounds of tobacco or more or has previously been convicted two or more times of a violation of paragraph one of this subdivision shall be guilty of a class E felony.

      (b) Any person, other than an agent licensed by the commissioner, who possesses or transports for the purpose of sale any unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages of cigarettes subject to tax imposed by section four hundred seventy-one of this chapter, or who sells or offers for sale unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages of cigarettes in violation of the provisions of article twenty of this chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Any person who violates the provisions of this subdivision after having previously been convicted of a violation of this subdivision within the preceding five years shall be guilty of a class E felony.

      (c) (1) Any person, other than an agent licensed by the commissioner, who willfully possesses or transports for the purpose of sale ten thousand or more cigarettes subject to the tax imposed by section four hundred seventy-one of this chapter in any unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages or who willfully sells or offers for sale ten thousand or more cigarettes in any unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages in violation of article twenty of this chapter shall be guilty of a class E felony.

        (2) Any person, other than an agent licensed by the commissioner, who willfully possesses or transports for the purpose of sale thirty thousand or more cigarettes subject to the tax imposed by section four hundred seventy-one of this chapter in any unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages or who willfully sells or offers for sale thirty thousand or more cigarettes in any unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages in violation of article twenty of this chapter shall be guilty of a class D felony.

      (d) For the purposes of this section, the possession or transportation within this state by any person, other than an agent, at any one time of five thousand or more cigarettes in unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages shall be presumptive evidence that such cigarettes are possessed or transported for the purpose of sale and are subject to the tax imposed by section four hundred seventy-one of this chapter. With respect to such possession or transportation any provisions of article twenty of this chapter providing for a time period during which a use tax imposed by such article may be paid on unstamped cigarettes or unlawfully or improperly stamped cigarettes or during which such cigarettes may be returned to an agent shall not apply. The possession within this state of more than four hundred cigarettes in unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages by any person other than an agent at any one time shall be presumptive evidence that such cigarettes are subject to tax as provided by article twenty of this chapter.

      (e) Nothing in this section shall apply to common or contract carriers or warehousemen while engaged in lawfully transporting or storing unstamped packages of cigarettes as merchandise, or lawfully transporting or storing tobacco products, nor to any employee of such carrier or warehouseman acting within the scope of his employment, nor to public officers or employees in the performance of their official duties requiring possession or control of unstamped or unlawfully stamped packages of cigarettes or possession or control of tobacco products, nor to temporary incidental possession by employees or agents of persons lawfully entitled to possession, nor to persons whose possession is for the purpose of aiding police officers in performing their duties.

      (f) Any willful act or omission, other than those described in section eighteen hundred one of this article or subdivision (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (g), (h) or (i) of this section, by any person which constitutes a violation of any provision of article twenty of this chapter shall constitute a misdemeanor.

      (g) Any person who falsely or fraudulently makes, alters or counterfeits any stamp prescribed by the tax commission under the provisions of article twenty of this chapter, or causes or procures to be falsely or fraudulently made, altered or counterfeited any such stamp, or knowingly and willfully utters, purchases, passes or tenders as true any such false, altered or counterfeited stamp, or knowingly and willfully possesses any cigarettes in packages bearing any such false, altered or counterfeited stamp, and any person who knowingly and willfully makes, causes to be made, purchases or receives any device for forging or counterfeiting any stamp, prescribed by the tax commission under the provisions of article twenty of this chapter, or who knowingly and willfully possesses any such device, shall be guilty of a class E felony. For the purposes of this subdivision, the words "stamp prescribed by the tax commission" shall include a stamp, impression or imprint made by a metering machine, the design of which has been approved by such commission.

      (h) (1) Any dealer, other than a distributor appointed by the commissioner of taxation and finance under article twenty of this chapter, who shall knowingly transport or have in his custody, possession or under his control more than ten pounds of tobacco or more than five hundred cigars upon which the taxes imposed by article twenty of this chapter have not been assumed or paid by a distributor appointed by the commissioner of taxation and finance under article twenty of this chapter, or other person treated as a distributor pursuant to section four hundred seventy-one-d of this chapter, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than five thousand dollars or by a term of imprisonment not to exceed thirty days.

        (2) Any person, other than a dealer or a distributor appointed by the commissioner under article twenty of this chapter, who shall knowingly transport or have in his custody, possession or under his control more than fifteen pounds of tobacco or more than seven hundred fifty cigars upon which the taxes imposed by article twenty of this chapter have not been assumed or paid by a distributor appointed by the commissioner under article twenty of this chapter, or other person treated as a distributor pursuant to section four hundred seventy-one-d of this chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than five thousand dollars or by a term of imprisonment not to exceed thirty days.

        (3) Any person, other than a distributor appointed by the commissioner under article twenty of this chapter, who shall knowingly transport or have in his custody, possession or under his control twenty-five hundred or more cigars or fifty or more pounds of tobacco upon which the taxes imposed by article twenty of this chapter have not been assumed or paid by a distributor appointed by the commissioner under article twenty of this chapter, or other person treated as a distributor pursuant to section four hundred seventy-one-d of this chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Provided further, that any person who has twice been convicted under this subdivision shall be guilty of a class E felony for any subsequent violation of this section, regardless of the amount of tobacco products involved in such violation.

        (4) For purposes of this subdivision, such person shall knowingly transport or have in his custody, possession or under his control tobacco or cigars on which such taxes have not been assumed or paid by a distributor appointed by the commissioner where such person has knowledge of the requirement of the tax on tobacco products and, where to his knowledge, such taxes have not been assumed or paid on such tobacco products by a distributor appointed by the commissioner of taxation and finance.

      (i) Any person who falsely or fraudulently makes, alters or counterfeits a registration certificate or sticker required under the provisions of section four hundred eighty-a of this chapter, or causes or procures to be falsely or fraudulently made, altered or counterfeited any such registration certificate or sticker, or knowingly and willfully utters, purchases, passes or tenders as true any such false, altered or counterfeited registration certificate or sticker, and any person who knowingly and willfully makes, causes to be made, purchases or receives any device for forging or counterfeiting any registration certificate or sticker required under the provisions of such section, or who knowingly and willfully possesses any such device, shall be guilty of a class B misdemeanor.

    [emphasis added]

nolu chan  posted on  2014-12-08   13:24:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: All (#21)

It's for the children. It's for the people.

NYC Local Law 97 [28 page PDF]

The New York City Council

City Hall

New York, NY 10007

Legislation Text

File #: Int 1021-2013, Version: A

Int. No. 1021-A

By Council Members Arroyo, Cabrera, Chin, Comrie, Jr., Dromm, Fidler, King, Lander, Lappin, Rodriguez, Levin, Vann, Vacca, Palma, Gennaro, Koslowitz, Van Bramer, Koo, Crowley, Eugene and Recchia, Jr. (by request of the Mayor)

A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the sale of cigarettes and tobacco products, and the regulation of retail dealers and wholesale dealers of cigarettes, and repealing section 17-707 of the administrative code of the city of New York, relating to requiring public health messages where tobacco advertisements appear.

Be it enacted by the Council as follows:

Section 1. Legislative findings. The Council hereby finds that tobacco use is a leading cause of preventable premature death in the United States and the City of New York, and cigarette trafficking costs New York City and State hundreds of millions of dollars annually in foregone tax revenue. Cigarettes are the only consumer products that, when used exactly as intended, kill up to one-third of regular users. Currently, 981,000 adults smoke in New York City. In 2011, 28,000 New York City public high school students under the age of eighteen experimented with smoking for the first time; of those, more than one-third (35%) currently smoke. In total, approximately 19,000 New York City public high school students under the age of eighteen smoke. Smoking-related illnesses cost New Yorkers billions of dollars annually in health care costs and lost productivity.

Given the substantial human and economic costs associated with tobacco use, New York City has taken numerous steps to reduce tobacco use among adults and to stop youth (persons under the age of eighteen) from starting to use cigarettes and tobacco products. In 2002, New York City employed a comprehensive, multifaceted tobacco control program incorporating the following components: (1) high cigarette excise taxes; (2) educational media campaigns on the risks of tobacco use; (3) a cessation program that helps people to quit; and (4) laws imposing restrictions and regulations on the sale and use of cigarettes and that helps people to quit; and (4) laws imposing restrictions and regulations on the sale and use of cigarettes and tobacco products. The City has succeeded in reducing the prevalence of adult tobacco use from 21.5% in 2002 to 15.5% in 2012, a 28% reduction. Prevalence among youth also declined substantially from 17.6% in 2001 to 8.5% in 2007. Youth smoking rates, however, have plateaued since, and remain at 8.5% as of 2011. Because tobacco use persists among youth and adults, the City must take further action.

Preventing youth and young adults from taking up smoking is critical because, in New York City, 80% of adults who become daily smokers start smoking before reaching the age of twenty-one, and nationwide, 99% of smokers start by age twenty-six. The City employs a strong retail inspection program to prevent illegal sales to youth, conducting more than 9,000 retail inspections annually, only 10% of which result in violations. Nevertheless, more than a quarter of underage New York City public high school students who smoke buy their cigarettes from retail stores.

The Council further finds, based on numerous studies, that high tobacco prices reduce tobacco consumption among both youth, who are especially price-sensitive, and adults. A 10% increase in cigarette prices reduces demand among adult smokers by 3-5% and among youth by 7%. High prices reduce the prevalence of tobacco use, the probability of trying tobacco for the first time, the average number of cigarettes consumed per smoker, initiation of daily smoking, and initiation of daily heavy smoking. In addition, reductions in smoking prevalence indirectly lead to even greater reductions by minimizing peer and parental influences and by helping addicted smokers to succeed in quitting.

[snip]

... Errrh... It's for the general slush fund.

http://assembly.state.ny.us/leg/?default_fld=%0D%0A&bn=S5462&term=&Text=Y

S05462 Text:

STATE OF NEW YORK

5462--B

2013-2014 Regular Sessions

IN SENATE

May 16, 2013 ___________

Introduced by Sens. GRISANTI, KENNEDY, LATIMER, RITCHIE -- read twice and ordered printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Investigations and Government Operations -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee -- recommitted to the Committee on Investigations and Government Operations in accordance with Senate Rule 6, sec. 8 -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee

AN ACT to amend the tax law and the state finance law, in relation to allocating certain revenue to the tobacco use prevention and control program fund for programs to help smokers quit and to keep children from smoking

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEMBLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

Section 1. Statement of legislative intent. The legislature finds that:

New York state has raised over twelve billion dollars in tobacco revenues over the past seven years, yet only three and one-half percent of these revenues have been spent on the state's Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Program.

In the year 2013, New York state spent only sixteen percent of the amount recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on tobacco control. New York state was once a leader in tobacco control support spending, but now ranks twenty-first in the United States.

From the years 2007-2013, funding for the New York State Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Program was cut by more than half. This inadequate funding level for the program stands in contrast to promises made in 1998 by public officials to invest state dollars earned from the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement in tobacco control programs.

The Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement states that its purpose is to "achieve for the Settling States and their citizens significant funding for the advancement of public health" and "the implementation of important tobacco-related public health measures."

When more adequately funded, the State Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Program achieved successes in the effort to curb tobacco use. Teenage and adult tobacco use rates had fallen faster in New York state than in the United States as a whole.

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