Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “ATF”
ATF's Tobacco Enforcement Just Got Deprioritized. Here's What That Means for Illegal Vapes.
In February 2025, Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a memorandum laying out DOJ’s investigative and charging priorities for the new administration. Immigration enforcement, human trafficking, smuggling, and cartels made the list. Tobacco did not. The memorandum directed the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives to shift resources away from its alcohol and tobacco programs toward those identified priorities.
The practical consequence for e-cigarette enforcement is documented in GAO’s March 2026 report (GAO-26-107991), and the picture is nuanced rather than catastrophic—at least for now.
How the Federal Government Pursues Illegal E-Cigarette Sellers
The legal architecture for federal enforcement against unauthorized e-cigarettes is broader than most coverage of the issue suggests. A March 2026 GAO report (GAO-26-107991) maps out the full range of tools available to the Department of Justice—and which ones actually get used.
The Legal Basis
Two statutes form the primary framework. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act prohibits the distribution of e-cigarette products that are adulterated or misbranded in interstate commerce. Under FDA’s 2016 rule extending its tobacco authority to e-cigarettes, any product sold without FDA premarket authorization is automatically considered adulterated and misbranded—meaning the unauthorized status of a product is itself the legal violation, not any separate showing of harm or deception.