Friday, February 21, 2025

Attorney General James Sues Nation’s Largest Vape Distributors for Fueling the Youth Vaping Epidemic

 

Companies Intentionally Marketed Vaping Products to Children Despite Knowledge of Health Risks; Misled Consumers About Safety and Legality of Vaping
AG James Seeks Hundreds of Millions of Dollars for Damages, Penalties, Disgorgement, and Vaping Abatement Fund

New York Attorney General Letitia James announced a lawsuit against 13 major e-cigarette, or “vape,” manufacturers, distributors, and retailers for their role in fueling the youth vaping epidemic. These companies are responsible for illegally distributing, marketing, and selling flavored disposable vapes – including popular brands such as Puff Bar, Elf Bar, Geek Bar, Breeze, MYLE, and more – which have become extraordinarily popular among minors. An Office of the Attorney General (OAG) investigation found that these companies market highly addictive, candy- and fruit-flavored nicotine products to underage consumers, mislead customers about the safety and legality of their products, illegally ship products to New York, and violate health regulations designed to curb youth vaping.  

With this action, Attorney General James is holding the nation’s leading vape distributors accountable for their role in this public health crisis. The landmark lawsuit seeks hundreds of millions of dollars, including financial penalties for wide-ranging violations of local, state, and federal laws; damages and restitution for the public health impact of the companies’ illegal actions; the recovery of all revenue made from unlawful activity; and the establishment of an abatement fund to address the youth vaping crisis in New York. 

“The vaping industry is taking a page out of Big Tobacco’s playbook: they’re making nicotine seem cool, getting kids hooked, and creating a massive public health crisis in the process,” said Attorney General James. “For too long, these companies have disregarded our laws in order to profit off of our young people, but we will not risk the health and safety of our kids. Today, we are taking critical steps toward holding these companies accountable for the harm they have caused New Yorkers.” 

The vaping industry has adopted deceptive, inescapable marketing strategies that are reminiscent of the tactics that made the tobacco industry infamous. Vaping companies directly target youth with bright, colorful packaging, candy and fruit flavors, social media and influencer campaigns, and unproven claims that their products are “safe” alternatives to cigarettes. The vape products the defendants often help develop, design, and even taste-test are intended to attract young people, with eye-catching, cartoonish packaging and flavors like “Blue Razz Slushy,” “Sour Watermelon Patch,” “Unicorn Cake,” “Fruity Bears Freeze,” “Cotton Candy,” “Rainbow Rapper,” “Sour Fruity Worms,” “Fruity Pebbles,” and “Strawberry Cereal Donut Milk,” to entice kids.

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Vape companies use bright, colorful packaging and candy and fruit flavors to entice children.

The OAG investigation found that these companies often rely on social media in their marketing and ensure their vapes are abundantly available within walking distance of schools in an effort to reach young consumers. The companies also make use of celebrity or influencer endorsements, sponsor brand activations and social media photo opportunities at popular festivals and events, and promote dangerous vaping trends and challenges to drive engagement online. One company, Puff Bar, ran a social media advertisement during the early days of the pandemic lockdown that billed their vapes as “the perfect escape from back-to-back zoom calls [and] parental texts.”

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Vaping advertisements feature bright colors and candy, as well as illegal discounts and relatable language to attract kids.

The investigation also revealed that vape companies have long been aware that their products pose health risks to users – and are particularly harmful to youth – but have continued to target young people with deceptive and misleading messages about the products’ safety. In particular, the companies’ advertisements often position vaping products as a safer, healthier alternative to cigarettes. One of the defendants has even advanced conspiracy theories in an attempt to brush away concerns over the safety of vaping, repeatedly pushing the idea that state governments were campaigning to crush vaping in an attempt to boost tobacco sales for financial gain. In addition, despite knowing that New York banned the sale of flavored vapor products in 2020, the companies have continued to sell these products while intentionally misleading customers about the legality of the sales.

None of the companies named in the lawsuit have received authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for their fruit – or – candy flavored vapes, making their sale illegal under federal law. Attorney General James’ lawsuit alleges the companies have knowingly and intentionally ignored FDA warning letters and regulations, as well as the federal Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking (PACT) Act, which prohibits online sales of vaping products to consumers and unlicensed retailers. In addition to violating federal bans on shipping these products, the companies fail to register with the appropriate authorities, verify recipients’ ages, or follow any other shipping restrictions.

Attorney General James also alleges that these vape companies have blatantly disregarded New York state public health laws, including several policies enacted in recent years to curb youth vaping. In 2020, New York banned the sale of flavored vapor products, restricted the shipment and transport of nicotine products, and raised the legal purchase age for all vapes to 21. The state also banned coupons and discounts on vapes, and began requiring certain companies to disclose dangerous ingredients in their vapes. The vape companies named in this lawsuit have repeatedly and knowingly violated these laws.

The OAG investigation uncovered widespread evidence of this illegal conduct, including documents showing illegal shipments of flavored vapes to New York residential addresses, communications demonstrating companies’ knowledge of health and legal risks, and company advertisements and social media campaigns that misleadingly promoted vapes as safe and fun.

The rise in youth vaping has reversed years of progress in reducing tobacco and nicotine use among adolescents. According to the New York State Department of Health (DOH), e-cigarette use among high school students has skyrocketed over the past decade, with flavored vapes being the most commonly used tobacco and nicotine product among youth. Attorney General James’ lawsuit highlights the severe health risks associated with vaping, including nicotine addiction, respiratory issues, and long-term cognitive impairments. According to the American Lung Association, some vape ingredients have been found to cause irreversible lung damage, while nicotine exposure during adolescence can permanently alter brain development. Kids who use nicotine products are also at increased risk for future addiction to other drugs. 

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The rapid rise popularity of vaping among teenagers reversed years of progress in reducing youth nicotine use. 

For their illegal conduct and role in fueling the youth vaping crisis, Attorney General James is seeking broad relief from the companies, including a permanent ban on selling flavored vapes in New York, significant financial penalties and restitution for harm caused to New Yorkers, public corrective statements to inform consumers of the dangers of vaping, and the creation of an abatement fund to address and mitigate the effects of the public health crisis these companies helped create. In addition, OAG is pursuing total disgorgement of all revenues earned as a result of illegal activity. In total, Attorney General James is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in financial compensation for the havoc these companies’ products and marketing have wreaked on New York’s kids and their health and well-being.

The manufacturers, distributors, and retailers named in the lawsuit are Puff Bar, MYLE Vape, Pod Juice, Mi-One Brands, Happy Distro, Demand Vape, EVO Brands, PVG2, Magellan Technology, Midwest Goods, Safa Goods, EVO Brands, and Price Point Distributors, as well as Price Point principals Weis Khwaja, Hamza Jalili, and Mohammad Jalili. 

Comptroller Lander Responds to Governor Hochul’s Proposed Guardrails on Mayor Adams

 

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released the following statement: 

“New York City is facing an unprecedented leadership crisis. The resignation of four deputy mayors calls into question the core continuity of government services. And the corrupt bargain between the U.S. Justice Department and Mayor Eric Adams calls into question whether the Mayor works for New Yorkers or for Donald Trump. 

“Mayor Adams failed to stand up for New Yorkers when Elon Musk stole $80 million from New York City’s bank account last week. He failed to stand up when Donald Trump declared he was a king with the monarchical power to reverse New York’s congestion pricing program yesterday. What will he fail to stand up for next? 

“While the best solution to restore public trust would be for Mayor Adams to resign and to keep the four deputy mayors in place instead, Governor Hochul’s new guardrails are useful to keep New York City moving forward in these precarious times. 

“Governor Hochul’s proposal expands the authority of the New York City Comptroller—along with other City officials—to pursue legal action against the federal government if the Mayor is unwilling to do so. If the Adams administration fails to defend New York from federal overreach, my Office will immediately and aggressively use this authority to sue President Trump and DOGE to recoup the $80 million stolen from the City’s bank account– and to block any similar actions in the future. 

“Going forward, New Yorkers eagerly await Judge Ho’s ruling. I hope he will heed the courageous voices of Danielle Sassoon and Hagan Scotten and reject the corrupt Justice Department motion. If he is going to dismiss the case, it should be with prejudice, so that it cannot be used as leverage to control the Mayor. 

“New Yorkers also deserve a contingency plan from Mayor Adams: to know how he plans to run City agencies in the wake of the resignation of his four deputy mayors and ensure that the services they rely on – from sanitation to fire response to NYCHA repairs – will not be negatively affected.  

“Let me be clear: I fully intend to use this new authority from the Governor – and my existing responsibilities under the City Charter – to fight like hell every day for the eight million people who call New York City home.”

BRONX MAN INDICTED FOR VICIOUS SLASHING OF TEEN GIRL IN SUBWAY


Defendant, 18, Was Allegedly Retaliating for Social Media Insult 

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been indicted for first-degree Assault and additional charges for slashing a 17-year-old girl across the face, allegedly in retaliation for comments she made about his brother on social media. 

District Attorney Clark said “This vicious assault is another example of someone allegedly settling a petty dispute on social media through violence. This is completely unacceptable, and this defendant will be held accountable.” 

District Attorney Clark said Antonio Romero, 18, was indicted on first-degree Assault, second-degree Assault, third-degree Assault, fourth-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon and second-degree Menacing. He was arraigned before Supreme Court Justice Kim Parker Romero is due back in court on April 25, 2025.

According to the investigation, on December 17, 2024, at approximately 4:33 p.m., the defendant entered the subway station at East 149th Street and Grand Concourse and saw the victim and two of her friends. The defendant approached them with a knife in his hand and cut the victim from her left cheekbone to the corner of her mouth. The victim was taken to a hospital and required multiple layers of stitches for the laceration. The incident was captured on video cameras. The defendant told police that he slashed the girl because he believed she insulted his brother on social media.

District Attorney Clark thanked NYPD Detective Alex Tegan of the Bronx Transit Robbery Squad, and Sergeant William Batz, Detective Dennis Polanco and NYPD Officer Richard Acevedo of the Transit District 11 Field Intelligence Team.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt. 

Vice President of Health Care Software and Services Company Pleads Guilty to $1B Health Care Fraud Conspiracy

 

A Kansas man pleaded guilty to operating an internet-based platform that generated false doctors’ orders to defraud Medicare and other federal health care benefit programs of more than $1 billion.

According to court documents, Gregory Schreck, 50, of Johnson County, admitted that he and his co-conspirators targeted hundreds of thousands of Medicare beneficiaries to provide their personally identifiable information and agree to accept medically unnecessary orthotic braces, pain creams, and other items through misleading mailers, television advertisements, and calls from offshore call centers. Schreck and his co-conspirators owned, controlled, and operated DMERx, an internet-based platform that generated false and fraudulent doctors’ orders for orthotic braces, pain creams, and other items for these beneficiaries. Schreck, a vice president of the company that operated DMERx, admitted that he offered to connect pharmacies, durable medical equipment (DME) suppliers, and marketers with telemedicine companies that would accept illegal kickbacks and bribes in exchange for signed doctors’ orders that were transmitted using the DMERx platform. Schreck and his co-conspirators received payments for coordinating these illegal kickback transactions and referring the completed doctors’ orders to the DME suppliers, pharmacies, and telemarketers that paid for them. The fraudulent doctors’ orders generated by DMERx falsely represented that a doctor had examined and treated the Medicare beneficiaries when, in reality, purported telemedicine companies paid doctors to sign the orders without regard to medical necessity and based only on a brief telephone call with the beneficiary, or sometimes no interaction with the beneficiary at all. The DME suppliers and pharmacies that paid illegal kickbacks in exchange for these doctors’ orders generated through DMERx billed Medicare and other insurers more than $1 billion. Medicare and the insurers paid more than $360 million based on these false and fraudulent claims.

Schreck pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud and faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled at a later date. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Supervisory Official Antoinette T. Bacon of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; Acting Special Agent in Charge Isaac Bledsoe of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) Miami Regional Office; Acting Special Agent in Charge Justin E. Fleck of the FBI Miami Field Office; Special Agent in Charge David Spilker of the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General (VA-OIG)’s Southeast Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Jason Sargenski of the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), Southeast Field Office made the announcement.

HHS-OIG, FBI, VA-OIG, and DCIS are investigating the case.

Trial Attorneys Darren C. Halverson and Jennifer E. Burns of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section are prosecuting the case. Fraud Section Trial Attorneys Andrea Savdie and Shane Butland assisted in the prosecution.

The Fraud Section leads the Criminal Division’s efforts to combat health care fraud through the Health Care Fraud Strike Force Program. Since March 2007, this program, currently comprised of nine strike forces operating in 27 federal districts, has charged more than 5,800 defendants who collectively have billed federal health care programs and private insurers more than $30 billion. In addition, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with HHS-OIG, are taking steps to hold providers accountable for their involvement in health care fraud schemes. More information can be found at www.justice.gov/criminal-fraud/health-care-fraud-unit.

NYC PUBLIC ADVOCATE RESPONDS TO THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION CUTTING HAITI'S TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS

 

"The Trump administration’s slashing of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians is about doing as much harm as possible, as quickly as possible, for anyone they can marginalize and erase.  

 

"My office worked with the previous administration to secure extended protections for Haiti and a number of other countries where there is immediate danger for residents, and this cruel reversal is disastrous, if expected. Alarmingly, I’m sure there will be more. The federal government seems dedicated to making as many Black and Brown people as possible eligible for deportation, regardless of status, by revoking legal protections. 

 

"The truth is that Donald Trump is trying to make our own country one where immigrants, Black and Brown communities, LGBTQ communities, and all marginalized groups are in immediate danger.  

"In the face of the threat he poses, I draw inspiration from the Haitian motto of ‘L'union fait la force.’ In unity, there is strength. Today, we must stand united with our Haitian family, as we did yesterday with Venezuelans and will tomorrow with another group, building a coalition of compassion to protect one another from the worst harm that Donald Trump, his allies, and his enablers, aim to inflict." 


NEW YORK CITY LAW DEPARTMENT ANNOUNCES LAWSUIT AGAINST TRUMP ADMINISTRATION FOR UNLAWFUL $80 MILLION “MONEY-GRAB” INVOLVING MIGRANT FUNDING

 

Suit Outlines How Federal Government Grabbed Back Funding for Migrant Crisis Without Following Agency Procedures and Federal Regulations 

  

Lawsuit Would Require Federal Government to Return $80 Million in Migrant Funding and Prevent Them from Clawing Back Additional Funding in Future 

  

City Government Has Already Spent $7 Billion to Manage National Migrant Crisis, While Federal Government Assistance Has Been Minimal 


The New York City Law Department today announced its federal lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s unlawful seizure of over $80 million previously applied for, awarded, approved, and paid by the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to the City of New York. These funds were paid to reimburse expenses already spent on the asylum seeker international humanitarian crisis that came to New York City’s doorstep in the spring of 2022 under a FEMA program to assist localities bearing the brunt of costs of providing shelter and services to individuals released by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) into U.S. communities. The suit, motion for a preliminary and permanent injunction, and motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO) against the federal government argues that the funds that were previously reviewed, approved, and paid out by FEMA were removed out of a city bank account on February 11, 2025, without notice or administrative process of any kind, violating federal regulations and terms of the Shelter and Service Program (SSP) grant terms, as well as abusing the federal government’s authority and obligations to implement congressionally-approved and funded programs. The city seeks to recoup the funds and ensure the federal government does not, again, improperly withdraw disbursed funds or hold future funds that the city is entitled to receive.  

  

“Without a doubt, our immigration system is broken, but the cost of managing an international humanitarian crisis should not overwhelmingly fall onto one city alone,” said New York City Mayor Eric Adams. “With very little help from the federal government, our administration has skillfully managed an unprecedented crisis, which has seen over 231,000 people enter our city asking for shelter. The $80 million that FEMA approved, paid, and then rescinded — after the city spent more than $7 billion in the last three years — is the bare minimum our taxpayers deserve. And that’s why we’re going to work to ensure our city’s residents get every dollar they are owed. Thank you to Corporation Counsel Goode-Trufant and the entire team at the Law Department for working to ensure New York taxpayers can start to be made whole again.” 

  

“As alleged in the complaint, the Trump administration, without any notification or administrative process, and in violation of federal regulations and grant terms, unilaterally took back more than $80 million, which they attempted to justify in a belated ‘noncompliance’ letter,” said New York City Corporation Counsel Muriel Goode-Trufant. “We are seeking relief to recoup the money and prevent this from happening again.” 

  

On February 4, 2025, FEMA disbursed $80,481,861.42 to the City of New York to reimburse the city under a program that Congress funded to “support sheltering and related activities provided by non-federal entities, in support of relieving overcrowding in short-term holding facilities of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.” FEMA awarded the city the grants to ensure “the safe, orderly, and humane release of noncitizen migrants from DHS short-term holding facilities.” But on February 11, 2025, the federal government, without any notice or explanation, clawed back those funds. On February 19, 2025, the federal government belatedly provided the city a “noncompliance” letter that did not identify any noncompliance by the city. Rather, it announced “concerns,” which are unfounded and do not comport with how the city has managed the unprecedented crisis brought to its doorstep  

  

Today’s suit — filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York — argues that the letter is a mere cover to mask the real purpose of defendants’ “money-grab,” which — as many have stated publicly — is to withhold the funds permanently because they oppose the purposes for which the funds were appropriated, awarded, approved, and paid.  

  

The Law Department is further arguing that the federal defendants’ withholding of these funds is arbitrary and capricious, contrary to law, ultra vires, and in excess of authority, without observance of lawful procedures. Further the Law Department claims that the actions by these defendants violate the Due Process Clause, the separation of powers doctrine, and the Spending Clause of the U.S. Constitution.  

  

The city is seeking a preliminary and permanent injunction, as well as a TRO from the court 1) ordering the defendants to return the $80 million to the city’s bank account, 2) enjoining defendants from taking any further money from any city bank account in connection with these SSP grants, and 3) enjoining them from withholding SSP funds.  

  

The City of New York has already spent $7 billion to successfully manage the asylum seeker crisis and has achieved great success. There are currently less than 45,000 migrants receiving city shelter services, down from a high of 69,000 in January of 2024 and out of the more than 231,000 that have arrived in New York City seeking city services since the spring of 2022. The city's efforts have directly resulted in approximately 24,000 fewer asylum seekers in the city's care on a day-to-day basis, and allowed the city to announce multiple additional site closures in December 2024January 2025and, most recently, in February 2025marking the end of tent-based emergency response shelters. 

  

Bronx Community Board 8 - New York Yankees Community Council Youth Leadership Award & Comeback Kid Achievement Award

 

Bronx Community Board 8 holds two award events for community youth each year. One through the New York Yankees and for the Comeback Kid Achievement Award.
Please see below for more information and nomination requirements.





Housing Lottery Launches for 62-66 West Tremont Avenue in Morris Heights, The Bronx

 

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 62-66 West Tremont Avenue, a six-story mixed-use building in Morris Heights, The Bronx. Built in 1926, the structure yields 86 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 67 units for residents at 50 to 80 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $0 to $134,820.

Amenities include an on-site resident manager, and an elevator for the units located along the A-J side of the building only. Tenants are responsible for electricity.

At 50 percent of the AMI, there are eight two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $0 for incomes ranging from $0 to $83,850. Applicants need to qualify for Section 8. Eligible tenants will pay 30 percent of their income for rent.

At 70 percent of the AMI, there is one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $1,664 for incomes ranging from $60,789 to $97,860; one two-bedroom with a monthly rent of $1,988 for incomes ranging from $73,989 to $117,390; and one three-bedroom with a monthly rent of $2,289 for incomes ranging from $84,583 to $134,820.

At 80 percent of the AMI, there are 18 studios with a monthly rent of $1,655 for incomes ranging from $60,035 to $99,440, and 38 one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $1,769 for incomes ranging from $64,389 to $111,840.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than August 19, 2025.