ILLEGAL TOBACCO
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Safer streets in Gateshead following ‘tab-house’ raid
Police and trading standards have seized hundreds of counterfeit
cigarettes and packets of tobacco following a raid on two homes on
Gateshead's Springwell Estate.
The raids were part of a crackdown on so-called "tab houses" -
properties from which residents are known to sell cut-price
smuggled or fake cigarettes.
The haul included 1,200 Jin Ling cigarettes, made specifically for
the illegal market, and 141 packets of Turner branded hand-rolling
tobacco, which may have been manufactured legally but only for
distribution abroad.
Councillor Peter Mole, the council's cabinet member for safer
stronger communities, said: "This raid puts down a definite marker
showing those who operate illegal 'tab houses' that it will not be
tolerated and is an excellent example of partnership working
between our trading standards officers, Northumbria Police and the
community.
"The sale of illegal cigarettes is a problem that goes well beyond
the billions of pounds lost to the public purse through unpaid
duty. 'Tab houses' often sell their illegal cigarettes to children,
exposing them to all the well-documented health risks associated
with smoking.
"People have often viewed these illegal tobacco suppliers in a
favourable light but the reality is their activities - particularly
when suppliers are in close proximity to schools - get young people
hooked on smoking, sell products with no information about their
content and create a knock on effect of criminal activity in the
wider area.
"Thanks to the excellent work of the Get Some Answers campaign,
which is backed by health, police, HMRC and local authorities such
as Gateshead Council, people are now more aware that having one of
these illegal houses at the end of their road has a detrimental
effect on the quality of life in their neighbourhood."
Bill Fullen, chief of The Gateshead Housing Company, which owns
one of the raided homes, said: "Anyone selling tobacco from their
homes is in breach of their tenancy agreement and risks
eviction.
"We will continue working with Gateshead Council and Northumbria
Police to show there is no place for crime and anti-social
behaviour in Gateshead."
Ailsa Rutter, director of Fresh Smoke Free North East, which
campaigns for a smoke-free future, said: "Many of the people who
sell illegal tobacco have no morals or scruples about selling to
children, creating new generations of smokers who will become
addicted from their teens.
"Most people, even smokers, want something done about it. Recent
surveys found 89% wanted tougher sentences for tobacco smugglers,
while nine out of 10 people believe they are a danger to
children."
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