The Docket Sheet today again shows no movement.------Sun
Anytime new legislation is passed or new case law comes down during the pendency of a case, the parties are mandated to apprise the Court. This new legistlation was brought up repeatedly during the May 15th hearing and I am sure Judge Leon expected a Supplemental filing by the parties if the legislation passed----so it really is just the case taking its normal path and can not be viewed as any reflection of how the Court will ultimately rule------------Sun
Anytime new legislation is passed or new case law comes down during the pendency of a case, the parties are mandated to apprise the Court. This new legistlation was brought up repeatedly during the May 15th hearing and I am sure Judge Leon expected a Supplemental filing by the parties if the legislation passed----so it really is just the case taking its normal path and can not be viewed as any reflection of how the Court will ultimately rule------------Sun
go look at section 9.11 of the act, which addresses "reduced risk" products. The regulatory authority granted in this area is far more lax than even the soft authority granted to the FDA in the case of traditional tobacco products.
For yvilla: Me thinks I was wrong!As I said, happens a lot.
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Basically, they seem to be arguing that no matter the new law, e-cigs are still a tobacco product. Because they use a constituent of tobacco. Nicotine.
That also makes the lozenge, gum, nasal spray, et all, tobacco products, too, by the same logic. And they aren't. They are drugs, because nicotine is a drug being used to treat the medical condition known as nicotine dependence.
How is the e-cig different in the abstract from NRT drug products? It delivers the same drug, by use of a device. Keep in mind that lawyers can, and will, argue anything. Anything! But surely it's evident here that e-cig=tobacco cig is stretching reality a bit. And do we really want all the restrictions and taxes we'd get from such a decision?
Eagerly awaiting the verdict here so we can move on -- one direction or the other. After losing in Congress, this the bottom of the ninth for us.
Please be aware that electronic cigarettes that we have reviewed are drug-device combinations under section 503(g)(1) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the Act) (21 U.S.C. 353(g)(1)) with their "drug" uses, as defined by section 201(g) of the Act (21 U.S.C. § 321(g)), as the primary mode of action.
In this regard, these products contain no tobacco leaf or stem material, but are designed to look like conventional cigarettes. They are intended to be manipulated and used (inhaled) in ways similar to how a smoker manipulates and uses conventional cigarettes. And, like conventional cigarettes, they are intended primarily for the delivery of volatilized chemical substances to affect the body's structures and functions and/or to mitigate or treat the symptoms of nicotine addiction through a chemical or metabolic action on the body.
The "electronic cigarettes" that we have reviewed are designed with a re-chargeable battery-operated heating element that volatilizes the chemical constituents contained within replaceable cartridges. These cartridges may or may not include nicotine. Since we are not aware of any data establishing that such products are generally recognized among scientific experts as safe and effective for these "drug" uses, they are "new drugs," as defined by section 201(p) of the Act (21 U.S.C. § 321(p)) requiring approval of an application filed in accordance with section 505 of the Act (21 U.S.C. § 355) to be legally marketed in the United States. None of these so-called "electronic cigarettes" is covered by an approved NDA. Thus, the marketing of them in the United States would be subject to enforcement action, which is why your products have been detained.
Furthermore, the "electronic cigarettes" that we have reviewed are not subject to the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (FCLAA), Pub. L. No. 89-92, (15 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq), nor are they subject to the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act (CSTHEA), Pub. L. No. 98-474 (1986), (15 U.S.C. §§ 4401 et seq). Thus, they do not fit within the regulatory scheme that Congress has established for tobacco products.