Court Opinion

ID: 7802992
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-23 21:00:47.729966+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:29:33.702378
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 1 of 70

[PUBLISH]

In the

United States Court of Appeals
Hor the Eleventh Circuit

 

No. 21-13340

 

BIDI VAPOR LLC,

Petitioner,

versus

U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

ACTING COMMISSIONER OF U.S. FOOD AND

DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

Respondents.
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2 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0003460

 

 

No. 21-13387

 

DIAMOND VAPOR LLC,
Petitioner,
versus
U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,
Respondent.

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0003472

 
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 3

 

No. 21-13438

 

JOHNNY COPPER, L.L.C.,
Petitioner,
versus

U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

Respondent.

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0003757

 

 

No. 21-13454

 

VAPOR UNLIMITED LLC,

Petitioner.
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4 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

versus

U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

Respondent.

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0003581

 

 

No. 21-13521

 

UNION STREET BRANDS L.L.C.,
Petitioner,
versus

U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

Respondent.
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 5

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0003525

 

 

No. 21-13522

 

POP VAPOR CO. LLC,
Petitioner,

versus

U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION,

Respondent.

 

Petitions for Review of a Decision of the
Food and Drug Administration
Agency No. PM0002546

 
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6 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

Before WILLIAM Pryor, Chief Judge, ROSENBAUM, and BRASHER,
Circuit Judges.

WILLIAM Pryor, Chief Judge:

These petitions for review concern whether it was arbitrary
and capricious for the Food and Drug Administration to issue mar-
keting denial orders to six tobacco companies for their electronic
nicotine-delivery systems without considering the companies’ mar-
keting and sales-access-restriction plans designed to minimize
youth exposure and access. The Administration refused to consider
the marketing and sales-access-restriction plans based on both its
need for efficiency and its experience that marketing and sales-ac-
cess restrictions do not sufficiently reduce youth use of electronic
nicotine products. Because “agency action is lawful only if it rests
‘on a consideration of the relevant factors,” Michigan v. Env’t
Prot. Agency, 135.8. Ct. 2699, 2706 (2015) (quoting Motor Vehicle
Mfrs. Ass’n U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S.
29, 43 (1983)), and the Administration failed to consider the rele-
vant marketing and sales-access-restrictions plans, the marketing
denial orders were arbitrary and capricious. So, we grant the peti-
tions for review, set aside the marketing denial orders, and remand

to the Administration.
I. BACKGROUND

The Tobacco Control Act of 2009 prohibits manufacturers
from selling any “new tobacco product” without approval from the
Food and Drug Administration. See 21 U.S.C. § 387j. Any tobacco
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 7

product that was not on the market as of February 15, 2007, is a
“new tobacco product.” /d § 387j(a)(1). The Act instructs the Ad-
ministration to deny applications for new tobacco products if,
based on the information before it, the Administration finds “a lack
of a showing that permitting such tobacco product to be marketed
would be appropriate for the protection of the public health.” /d.
§ 387j(c)(2), (2)(A). Whether a new product is “appropriate for the
protection of the public health” is determined by evaluating “the
risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and
nonusers of the tobacco product.” /d. § 387j(c)(4). To make this de-
termination, the Administration must consider both the “likeli-
hood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such
products” and the “likelihood that those who do not use tobacco

products will start using such products.” /d.

In 2016, the Administration deemed that electronic nicotine-
delivery systems using nicotine derived from tobacco—including
e-liquids and e-cigarettes—were “tobacco products” within the Ad-
ministration’s regulatory authority. Deeming Tobacco Products to
Be Subject to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 81 Fed.
Reg. 28,974, 29,028 (May 10, 2016) (hereinafter Deeming Rule).
The Administration defines e-cigarettes as “electronic device[s]
that deliver[] e-liquid in aerosol form into the mouth and lungs
when inhaled.” U.S. Foop & DRUG ADMIN., PREMARKET TOBACCO
PRODUCT APPLICATIONS FOR ELECTRONIC NICOTINE DELIVERY
SYSTEMS: GUIDANCE FOR INDUSTRY 6 (2019) (hereinafter 2019 Guid-

ance). E-liquids are defined to “include liquid nicotine, nicotine-
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8 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

containing liquids,” and other liquids “that are intended or reason-
ably expected to be used with or for the human consumption of a

tobacco product.” Jd.

There are two categories of e-cigarettes: open and closed.
Open e-cigarettes are typically larger and require the user to re-fill
a tank with e-liquid. /d. Closed e-cigarettes tend to be smaller and
are either entirely disposable or use disposable, pre-filled car-
tridges. Id.

Because many electronic nicotine-delivery systems were al-
ready on the market by 2016, the Administration decided to stagger
its evaluation of the products and allow the products to stay on the
market in the interim. Deeming Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 29,009-10.
The Administration explained that as it gained more experience
regulating electronic nicotine-delivery systems, it expected to pro-
vide more guidance to manufacturers as to what information
would be required in the premarket authorization applications to
show that a product was “appropriate for the protection of [the]
public health.” See id. at 28,997. The original application deadline
for flavored electronic nicotine-delivery systems was September
2018, but “a series of schedule changes implemented by the [Ad-
ministration] and federal courts” moved the final deadline to Sep-
tember 9, 2020. Breeze Smoke, LLC v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin,
18 F.4th 499, 504 (6th Cir. 2021); accord Enforcement Priorities for
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems and Other Deemed Products
on the Market Without Premarket Authorization (Revised), 85
Fed. Reg. 23,973, 23,974 (Apr. 30, 2020).
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 9

Before the September 2020 application deadline, the Admin-
istration issued nonbinding guidance, hosted public meetings, and
published a proposed rule to explain to manufacturers what evi-
dence would be required in their applications. The Administration
repeatedly represented to tobacco companies that marketing and
sales-access-restriction plans were relevant to its determination of
whether their products were “appropriate for the protection of the
public health.” See 21 U.S.C. § 387j(c)(4). For example, at a public
meeting in 2018, an Administration representative stated that one
of the considerations the Administration “ha[d] used in deciding
whether a [tobacco] product [wa]s appropriate for the protection
of the public health” was whether “the marketing of the new [prod-
uct] [would] affect the likelihood of nonuser uptake, cessation
rates[,] or other significant shifts in user demographics in a manner
to decrease morbidity and mortality from tobacco product use.”
IILUN MURPHY, PREMARKET ‘TOBACCO PRODUCT APPLICATION
CONTENT OVERVIEW, U.S. FOOD & DRUG ADMIN. (Oct. 23, 2018),
https: // www.fda.gov/media/117507/download.

The Administration repeated this advice when it published
final guidance on premarket authorization applications for elec-
tronic nicotine-delivery-system products in June 2019. See 2019
Guidance, supra. The Administration recommended companies in-
clude any applicable “restrictions on the sales and distribution” of
their products in their applications “to help support a showing that
the marketing of the product would be [appropriate for the protec-
tion of the public health].” /d at 20-21; accord id. at 12.
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10 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

The Administration communicated its expectation that
companies submit marketing and sales-access-restriction plans in a
proposed rule published in September 2019. The proposed rule in-
cluded a requirement for applicants to submit marketing plans, in-
cluding “[aJny means by which youth-access or youth-exposure to
the products’ labeling, advertising, marketing, and promotion
would be limited.” Premarket Tobacco Product Applications and
Recordkeeping Requirements, 84 Fed. Reg. 50,566, 50,643 (pro-
posed Sept. 25, 2019) (to be codified at 21 C.F.R. pt. 1114). The pro-
posed rule explained that the information in an applicant’s market-
ing plan “is critical to [the Administration’s] determination of the
likelihood of changes in tobacco product use behavior.” /d. at
50,581; accord id. (stating that the Administration “will review the
marketing plan to evaluate potential youth access to, and youth ex-
posure to the labeling, advertising, marketing, or promotion of, a
new tobacco product” (emphasis added)). As an example, the pro-
posed rule stated that “heavy use of online social media to promote
a tobacco product without access restrictions, as opposed to actions
such as paper mailings directed only to current smokers of legal
age, indicates the potential for youth to be exposed to the promo-

tion of the product.” /d.

In April 2020, the Administration published a guidance doc-
ument about its enforcement priorities and “current thinking” on
electronic nicotine-delivery systems, which detailed the most-cur-
rent data on youth electronic nicotine-delivery-systems use, the en-

forcement measures employed by the Administration in its attempt
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 11

to curb minor use, and the considerations of the Administration
going forward. See U.S. FooD & DRUG ADMIN., ENFORCEMENT
PRIORITIES FOR ELECTRONIC NICOTINE DELIVERY SYSTEMS (ENDS)
AND OTHER DEEMED PRODUCTS ON THE MARKET WITHOUT
PREMARKET AUTHORIZATION (REVISED): GUIDANCE FOR INDUSTRY
2-3 (Apr. 2020) ( hereinafter 2020 Guidance). The 2020 Guidance
stated that, since 2017, the Administration had seen “an alarming
increase in the use of [electronic nicotine-delivery systems] by mid-
dle and high school students.” Jd at 6. The 2020 Guidance ex-
plained that, in response, the Administration increased enforce-
ment against and sent warning letters to manufacturers and retail-
ers who marketed or sold products to youth. /d. at 6-7. Guidance
also explained that certain kinds of marketing—such as making
products “resemble kid-friendly foods and drinks” or “ordinary
items that may not draw the attention of adults’—“can increase
youth appeal.” /d. at 25-26; see also id. at 25-27 (identifying cartoon
figures and entertainment media popular with children as market-
ing tools that increase popularity with minors). And the Guidance
stated that 71 percent of current youth users reported using the
products “because they come in flavors [they] like.” /d. at 14 (inter-

nal quotation marks omitted).

The 2020 Guidance also expressed the Administration’s po-
sition that “age verification alone is not sufficient to address [the
youth-use] issue” and that “many youth obtain their [products]
from friends or sources in their social networks.” /d. at 44-45. The

Administration stated that the policy outlined in the 2020 Guidance
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12 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

“[wa]s a more appropriate means to combat youth use of, and ac-
cess to, these products.” /d at 44. And in response to these data,
the Administration explained its rationale for treating flavored, car-
tridge-based electronic nicotine-delivery systems different from

other electronic-nicotine-delivery systems.

With respect to flavored, cartridge-based systems, the Ad-
ministration explained that “focusing on how the product was sold
would not appropriately address youth use of the products that are
most popular among youth.” /d. at 21. The Administration rea-
soned that “[t]hese products are produced on a large scale, are easy
to conceal, can be used discretely, and are not the products typi-
cally produced in vape shops that mix nicotine with e-liquid fla-
vors.” /d. And “[g]iven the urgent need to address the dramatic rise
in youth use,” the 2020 Guidance explained the Administration’s
decision to “prioritize[] enforcement with respect to any flavored,
cartridge-based [electronic nicotine-delivery system] products ...

without regard to the location or method of sale.” Jd

But with respect to other electronic nicotine-delivery sys-
tems, the Administration explained that it “intend[ed] to prioritize
enforcement for lack of marketing authorization for any” elec-
tronic nicotine-delivery system products “when the manufacturer
has not taken or is not taking adequate measures to prevent mi-
nors’ access to these products.” /d. To that end, the Guidance listed
“factors the [Administration] intend[ed] to consider” when decid-
ing if a manufacturer had taken adequate precautions to avoid

youth use for these other products. /d. at 22. Those factors included
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 13

“[w]hether the manufacturer ha[d] implemented adequate pro-
grams to monitor retailer compliance with age-verification and
sales restrictions” such as hotlines for reporting noncompliant sales
and mystery shopper programs; “ha[d] established and enforce[d]
penalties against retailers that fail to comply with age-verification
and sales restrictions”; was “us[ing] adequate age-verification tech-
nology” for online sales, such as “an independent, third-party age-
and identity-verification service that compares customer infor-
mation against third-party data sources, such as public records”;
and was “limit[ing]... the quantity of... products that a customer

may purchase within a given period of time.” /d.

On July 9, 2021, the Administration circulated an internal
memorandum instructing staff on how to evaluate the remaining
applications not yet in substantive scientific review. The memoran-
dum explained that the “Office of Science ha[d] been tasked with
developing a new plan to effectively manage the remaining non-
tobacco flavored [product applications] not in ... substantive sci-
entific review ... in order to take final action on as many applica-
tions as possible by September 10, 2021.” The Administration’s
“objective [wa]s to address these applications by applying a stand-
ard for evidence necessary to demonstrate an incremental benefit
to adult smokers of non-tobacco flavored [electronic nicotine-de-
livery systems] products.” To do so, the Administration adopted a
“fatal flaw” approach: “the evidence necessary for this evaluation
would be provided by either a randomized controlled trial... ora

longitudinal cohort study” and “[t]he absence of these types of
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14 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

studies [wa]s considered a fatal flaw, meaning any application lack-

ing this evidence w[ould] likely receive a marketing denial order.”

On August 17, 2021, the Administration circulated another
internal memorandum about the standard of review for non-to-
bacco-flavored products for “a streamlined scientific review.” The
memorandum reiterated that, “most likely,” the evidence that
would be necessary to meet the “high burden for applicants seeking
to demonstrate a potential benefit to adult smokers that could jus-
tify th[e] risk” to youth would be a randomized controlled trial or
a longitudinal cohort study. (Footnote omitted.) But the new mem-
orandum also stated that the Administration “would also consider
evidence from another study design, provided that it could reliably
and robustly assess behavior change (product switching or ciga-
rette reduction) over time, comparing users of flavored products
with those of tobacco-flavored products.” The memorandum de-
tailed the risks to youth and potential benefits to adults justifying

this standard of review.

The August 17 memorandum also addressed the marketing
and sales-access-restriction plans contained within many of the ap-
plications. It acknowledged that “[l]imiting youth access and expo-
sure to marketing is a critical aspect of product regulation.” But it
explained that, although “[iJ]t is theoretically possible that signifi-
cant mitigation efforts could adequately reduce youth access and
appeal such that the risk for youth initiation would be reduced,”
the Administration had not yet evaluated an application that had

“proposed advertising and promotion restrictions that would
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 15

decrease appeal to youth to a degree significant enough to address
and counter-balance the substantial concerns, and supporting evi-
dence, discussed above regarding youth use.” The Administration
also stated that it was “not aware of access restrictions that, to date,
have been successful in sufficiently decreasing the ability of youth
to obtain and use [electronic nicotine-delivery systems],” so “for
the sake of efficiency, the evaluation of the marketing plans in ap-
plications w[ould] not occur at this stage of review.” memorandum

was rescinded one week later on August 25, 2021.

On August 26, 2021, the Administration announced that it
had denied authorization for 55,000 flavored products from three
manufacturers in its first adjudications for the applications that pro-
gressed to substantive scientific review. Press Release, U.S. Food &
Drug Admin., FDA Denies Marketing Applications for About
55,000 Flavored E-Cigarette Products for Failing to Provide Evi-
dence They Appropriately Protect Public Health (Aug. 26, 2021),
https: / /bit.ly/32ehP8C. The Administration explained that it de-
nied the applications for “lack[] [of] sufficient evidence that they
have a benefit to adult smokers sufficient to overcome the public
health threat posed by the well-documented, alarming levels of
youth use of such products.” /d It explained that the agency re-
ceived applications for 6.5 million products from over 500 compa-
nies, with one company accounting for 4.5 million of the applica-
tions. /d. It reiterated the evidentiary standard from the rescinded
August 17 memorandum: that “evidence of benefits to adult smok-

ers for such products would likely be in the form of a randomized
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16 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

controlled trial or longitudinal cohort study, although the [Admin-
istration] does not foreclose the possibility that other types of evi-
dence could be adequate if sufficiently robust and reliable.” /d The
Administration explained that it issued marketing denial orders
“[bjecause this evidence was absent in th[o]se applications.” Jd.
And the Administration stated that it would “continue to review
other premarket tobacco applications for non-tobacco flavored
[products] to determine whether there is sufficient product-specific
scientific evidence of a benefit to adult smokers to overcome the
risk posed to youth” and that “in the absence of this evidence, the

agency intend[ed] to issue a[ marketing denial order].” /d.

Petitioners are tobacco companies that manufacture elec-
tronic nicotine-delivery system products and applied for premarket
authorization before the September 2020 deadline. Bidi Vapor LLC
applied for premarket authorization for eleven electronic nicotine-
delivery systems called “BIDI Sticks.” BIDI Sticks are disposable,
closed electronic nicotine-delivery systems pre-filled with flavored
e-liquid. BIDI Sticks come in eleven flavors: one tobacco and ten
non-tobacco flavors. Bidi’s application included product infor-
mation, scientific safety testing, literature reviews, consumer in-
sight surveys, and details about the company’s youth-access-pre-
vention measures, distribution channels, and adult-focused mar-
keting practices. Regarding its marketing and sales-access re-
strictions, Bidi stated in its application that the company’s “market-
ing strategies target only existing adult vapor product users, includ-

ing current adult smokers.” Toward that end, Bidi discontinued
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 17

direct sales through its website, declines to advertise anywhere
other than its age-gated website and adult-only brick-and-mortar
stores, and monitors its limited distribution channels for compli-
ance with its adult-only marketing and sales policies. Bidi requires
all “downstream business partners to establish and publicize a hot-
line for anonymous reporting of non-compliant sales and [to] im-
plement a policy of notifying the [Administration] of retailer viola-
tions.” “Bidi. . . uses a state-of-the-art authentication system to en-
sure supply chain security and prevent counterfeit ... products
from getting in the hands of consumers ... [and] to safeguard
against procurement by minors.” And Bidi renamed the flavors of
its products “to more neutral names” that would be less attractive

to youth.

Diamond Vapor LLC, Johnny Copper, L.L.C., Vapor Unlim-
ited LLC, and Union Street Brands L.L.C. applied for premarket
authorization for numerous e-liquids meant for use in open-tank
devices. These tobacco companies submitted survey information
from their customers about smoking cessation, literature reviews,
scientific studies about switching to e-cigarettes, smoking cessa-
tion, and the role of flavors, and details about its marketing and
youth-access-prevention plans. For example, Diamond uses tech-
nology for its online sales that relies on public records to verify a
purchaser’s age. Johnny Copper implemented “Trace/Verify tech-
nology” on all of its bottles of e-liquids, which involved placing a

unique QR code on each bottle connected to the driver’s license of
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18 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

the purchaser so that authorities can identify the purchaser if the

product is later found in the possession of a minor.

Pop Vapor Co. LLC applied for premarket authorization for
132 e-liquids and 18 disposable devices. In its application, Pop sub-
mitted a literature review, a marketing plan, proposed reseller re-
quirements, and post-market surveillance plans. Pop uses age-veri-
fication technology that uses public records for its online sales, lim-
its its “sales channels to online retail sites with adequate online age
verification software,” and uses only black-and-white labeling to

“minimize the visual appeal of [its] products.”

Between September 1 and September 16, 2021, the Admin-
istration issued nearly identical marketing denial orders to each of
the tobacco companies for their non-tobacco flavored products.
The orders stated that the “key basis for [the Administration’s] de-
termination” was that “[alll of [the applications] lack[ed] sufficient
evidence demonstrating that [the] flavored [products] will provide
a benefit to adult users that would be adequate to outweigh the
risks to youth.” Because the Administration did not find such evi-
dence in the tobacco companies’ applications, it could not “find
that permitting the marketing of [the] new tobacco products would
be appropriate for the protection of the public health” and did not

conduct scientific review of “other aspects of the applications.”

Alongside the orders, the Administration provided Tech-
nical Project Lead Reviews for each of the applications. The Re-
views explained the scope of review: an evaluation as to “whether

the subject [applications] contain[ed] evidence from a randomized
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 19

controlled trial, longitudinal cohort study, and/or other evidence
regarding the impact of the new products on switching or cigarette
reduction that could potentially demonstrate the added benefit to
adult users of their flavored [products] over an appropriate com-
parator tobacco-flavored [product].” Because the applications did
not include such evidence, the Administration issued marketing de-
nial orders to each of the tobacco companies for all of their flavored
products. The discussion sections of the Reviews were nearly iden-
tical to the rescinded August 17 memorandum. The Reviews also
included the same footnote from the August 17 memorandum ex-
plaining that the Administration did not evaluate the marketing
plans “for the sake of efficiency” because the Administration was
“not aware of access restrictions that, to date, have been successful
in sufficiently decreasing the ability of youth to obtain and use

[electronic nicotine-delivery systems].”

Finally, the record includes the forms that Administration
staffused to evaluate the authorization applications. The forms had
only three criteria: whether the application included a randomized
controlled trial on new product use and smoking behavior, a lon-
gitudinal cohort study on the same, or other evidence related to
the potential benefit to adults of flavored products compared to to-
bacco-flavored products. For each of the tobacco companies’ appli-
cations, the checkboxes next to the randomized-controlled-trial
and longitudinal-cohort-study criteria were marked “absent,” and

the “[o]ther evidence” criterion was marked “N/A.”
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20 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

After the tobacco companies had received marketing denial
orders, the Administration published its Final Rule. Premarket To-
bacco Product Applications and Recordkeeping Requirements, 86
Fed. Reg. 55,300 (Oct. 5, 2021) (to be codified at 21 C.F.R. pt. 1100
et seq.). Section 1114.7(f)(2) of the Final Rule explicitly requires ap-
plications to contain a “Description of Marketing Plans,” which
must include a description of the companies’ intended audience, its
plan to target that audience in its labeling, advertising, and market-
ing, and a discussion of how access to the new products would be
restricted with respect to youth. See 86 Fed. Reg. at 55,419-20 (to
be codified at 21 C.F.R. § 1114.7(f)(2)). The explanation accompa-
nying the Final Rule stated that information contained in market-
ing plans is “necessary for [the Administration] to properly evaluate
the extent of youth exposure . . . and youth access to the product”
and “is directly relevant to the . . . [Administration’s] consideration
of the likelihood that youth will use the tobacco product and its
determination that permitting the product to be marketed would
be [appropriate for the protection of the public health].” /d at
55,324.

In response to the marketing denial orders, the tobacco com-
panies each timely filed petitions for review. We stayed the mar-
keting denial orders for Bidi Vapor, Diamond Vapor, Johnny Cop-
per, and Vapor Unlimited. Some of the petitions were consolidated
before oral argument, and we consolidate the remaining petitions

for decision.

II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 21

We “hold unlawful and set aside agency action[s]” that are
“arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), (2)(A); VHV Jewelers, LLC
v. Wolf, 17 F.4th 109, 114 (11th Cir. 2021). We consider only “the
basis articulated by the agency itself,” not “appellate counsel’s post
hoc rationalizations.” State Farm, 463 U.S. at 50; see also Dep't
Homeland Sec. v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal, 140 S. Ct. 1891, 1909
(2020) (“An agency must defend its actions based on the reasons it

gave when it acted.”’).
III. DISCUSSION

The “arbitrary-and-capricious standard requires that agency
action be reasonable and reasonably explained.” Fed. Cominc’ns
Comm'n v. Prometheus Radio Project, 141 S. Ct. 1150, 1158 (2021).
“It follows that agency action is lawful only if it rests ‘on a consid-
eration of the relevant factors.” Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2706 (quot-
ing State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43). “Normally, an agency rule would
be arbitrary and capricious if the agency . . . entirely failed to con-
sider an important aspect of the problem... .” State Farm, 463 U.S.
at 43. To determine if an agency considered all the “relevant fac-
tors” and “important aspect[s] of the problem,” a court may look
to the language of the relevant statutes, see, e.g., Michigan, 135 S.
Ct. at 2706-08 (determining whether cost was a relevant factor by
interpreting the statutory phrase “appropriate and necessary”) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted), regulations, see, e.g., Cur. for Bi-
ological Diversity v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt. 698 F.3d 1101,
1122 (9th Cir. 2012) (determining whether “groundwater
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22 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

withdrawals were a relevant factor” by looking to the Endangered
Species Act regulations), the administrative record, see, e.g., id. at
1123-24 (finding support in the record of “the possible impact of
ground water withdrawal on surface water levels” and concluding
that “therefore ... the Biological Opinion should have addressed

it”) and even “beyond the administrative record,” id. at 1123 n.14.

To decide if a new tobacco product is “appropriate for the
protection of the public health,” 21 U.S.C. § 387j(c)(2)(A), the To-
bacco Control Act requires the Administration to consider “the
risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and
nonusers of the tobacco product,” and explicitly instructs the Ad-
ministration to consider both the “likelihood that existing users of
tobacco products will stop using such products” and the “likelihood
that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such
products,” id § 387j(c)(4). The Administration’s 2019 Guidance
recommended that companies include any applicable “restrictions
on the sales and distribution” of their products in their applications
“to help support a showing that the marketing of the product
would be [appropriate for the protection of the public health], 2019
Guidance, supra, at 20-21, and the Administration’s 2020 Guidance
included marketing and sales-access-restriction plans in the “factors
the [Administration] intend[ed] to consider” when deciding if a
manufacturer had taken adequate precautions to avoid youth use,
2020 Guidance, supra, at 22. Although there was not a final, pub-
lished regulation in effect at the time the marketing denial orders

were issued in September 2021, both the proposed rule published
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 23

in 2019 and the final rule published in October 2021 identify mar-
keting and sales-access-restriction plans as “critical,” “necessary,”
and “directly relevant” to its determination. See 84 Fed. Reg. at
50,581 (proposed rule describing applicants’ marketing and sales-
access-restriction plans as “critical to [the Administration’s] deter-
mination of the likelihood of changes in tobacco product use be-
havior” (emphasis added)); 86 Fed. Reg. at 55,324 (to be codified at
21 C.F.R. § 1114.7(f)(2)) (final rule describing the required market-
ing plans as including “information necessary for [the Administra-
tion] to properly evaluate the extent of youth exposure ... and
youth access to the product” and “directly relevant to the . . . [Ad-
ministration’s] consideration of the likelihood that youth will use
the tobacco product and its determination that permitting the
product to be marketed would be [appropriate for the protection
of the public health]” (emphases added)). And the record includes
the companies’ proposed marketing and sales-access restrictions
that go to the heart of the Act’s requirements and the Administra-

tion’s concerns about youth access to the companies’ products.

The marketing and sales-access-restriction plans in the to-
bacco companies’ applications were relevant factors to the Admin-
istration’s determination as to whether marketing the companies’
products would be “appropriate for the protection of the public
health.” See 21 U.S.C. § 387j(¢)(2)(A). The marketing and sales-ac-
cess-restriction plans bear on the statutory requirement to consider
the “likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will

start using such products.” See id. § 387j(c)(4). The many guidance
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24 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

documents recommending that the companies include their mar-
keting and sales-access-restriction plans establish that the Admin-
istration recognized the plans to be relevant to its analysis. See 2019
Guidance, supra, at 12, 20-21; 2020 Guidance, supra, at 22; Ctr. for
Biological Diversity, 698 F.3d at 1122-24. Both the proposed rule
and the final rule explicitly require applicants to submit detailed
marketing and sales-access-restriction plans, and the explanations
accompanying the proposed and final rules identify this infor-
mation as “critical,” “necessary,” and “directly relevant” to the Ad-
ministration’s analysis. See 84 Fed. Reg. at 50,581; 21 C.F.R.
§ 1114.7(f)(2); 86 Fed. Reg. at 55,324. Although neither the pro-
posed rule nor the final rule governed this matter when the mar-
keting denial orders issued, together they confirm that the Admin-
istration has consistently recognized that the marketing and sales-
access-restriction plans are relevant factors to the determination.
And the record includes marketing and sales-access-restriction
plans submitted by the companies that directly address an “im-
portant aspect of the problem’—youth access to the companies’
products. See State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43; Ctr. for Biological Diver-
sity, 698 F.3d at 1123-24.

Because the marketing and sales-access-restriction plans
were relevant factors and addressed “an important aspect of the
problem,” State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43, it was arbitrary and capricious
for the Administration not to consider them. The Administration
explicitly stated in marketing denial orders and Technical Project

Lead Reviews that it did not consider the marketing or sales-access-
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 25

restriction plans in the tobacco companies’ applications. It is also
unclear from the record before this Court what marketing plans or
sales-access restrictions the Administration considered before mak-
ing the decision to ignore the plans proposed by these six tobacco
companies. The footnote explaining that the Administration did
not consider the marketing plans because of its experience appar-
ently was included in every Technical Project Lead report, as it ap-
pears in every report given to the six tobacco companies here and
appears in the sample report provided on the Administration’s
website. See U.S. Foop & DRUG ADMIN., TECHNICAL PROJECT LEAD
(TPL) REVIEW OF PMTAS _ (Sept. 17, 2021) ,
https: / /www.fda.gov/media/152482/download. So, it is unclear
which applications the Administration evaluated before making
the decision not to consider any marketing or sales-access-re-
striction plans or which marketing and sales-access proposals were

included in the applications allegedly evaluated.

The Administration offers its experience as its primary ex-
cuse for its refusal to consider the marketing and sales-access-re-
striction plans. The Administration cites its “extensive experience
with sales[-Jaccess and marketing restrictions” and repeats its expla-
nation from the marketing denial orders that it was “not aware of
access restrictions that, to date, have been successful in sufficiently
decreasing the ability of youth to obtain and use [e-cigarettes].” (In-
ternal quotation marks omitted.) It asserts that the tobacco compa-
nies “did not purport to propose novel measures outside of [the

Administration’s] experience” and points to statements made in its
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26 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

2020 Guidance about how sales-access restrictions on their own
had failed to reduce youth use. See 2020 Guidance, supra, at 44-45.
And it argues that it “reasonably determined that consideration of
[the companies’] proposed advertising and sales[-Jaccess re-
strictions would not tip the balance between adult benefits and

youth risks and therefore would not alter [its] conclusion.”

Experience fails as a justification for ignoring the marketing
and sales-access-restrictions plans. Although “[a]gencies, the [Food
and Drug Administration] among them, have expertise and experi-
ence in administering their statutes that no court can properly ig-
nore,” see Judulang v. Holder, 565 U.S. 42, 53 (2011), reviewing
courts must ensure that an agency “consider[ed] . . . the relevant
factors” and made no “clear error of judgment,” id. (quoting State
Farm, 463 U.S. at 43). The Administration ignored the marketing
and sales-access-restriction plans because the Administration had
not yet evaluated an application that had “proposed advertising
and promotion restrictions that would decrease appeal to youth to
a degree significant enough to address and counter-balance the sub-
stantial concerns, and supporting evidence, discussed above re-
garding youth use” and was “not aware of access restrictions that,
to date, ha[d] been successful in sufficiently decreasing the ability
of youth to obtain and use [electronic nicotine-delivery systems].”
But this excuse is akin to a federal district court judge refusing to
hear a convicted criminal defendant at sentencing about his refor-
mation plans or the impact on his family because, in the judge’s

experience, he found that those things do not matter. Like the
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 27

federal judge considering the convicted criminal’s pleas at sentenc-
ing, the Administration is not required to find the marketing and
sales-access-restriction plans convincing or decide that this evi-
dence tilts the scales—but it is required to consider it because it is
a “relevant factor[]” and “important aspect of the problem.” See

State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43 (internal quotation marks omitted).

The Administration offered an additional excuse in the
Technical Project Lead Reviews for refusing to consider the mar-
keting and sales-access-restriction plans: efficiency. The Admin-
istration seems to have abandoned that argument on appeal. But
to the extent that the Administration maintains that efficiency is an
adequate excuse, it is not. By definition, the requirement that fed-
eral agencies consider all “relevant factors,” see Michigan, 135 S.
Ct. at 2706 (internal quotation marks omitted), prohibits agency
shortcuts. If an agency could excuse considering all the relevant
factors by appealing to efficiency, the requirement would cease to

have any effect.

Finally, ignoring the marketing and sales-access-restriction
plans was not harmless error. The Administrative Procedure Act
instructs courts to take “due account ... of the rule of prejudicial
error” when reviewing agency decisions. See 5 U.S.C. § 706. The
Administration argues that because the tobacco companies do not
purport to have proposed marketing and sales-access-restriction
plans different from the measures that the Administration had pre-
viously determined were inadequate to “counter-balance” the

problem of youth use, no harm flowed from the failure to consider
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28 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

this evidence. But an agency decision is harmless only “when a mis-
take of the administrative body is one that clearly had no bearing
on the procedure used or the substance of the decision reached.”
United States v. Schwarzbaum, 24 F.4th 1355, 1366 (11th Cir. 2022)
(internal quotation marks omitted). It is difficult to imagine how
failure to consider a relevant factor would “clearly ha[ve] no bear-
ing on the procedure used or substance of the decision reached.”
See id. (emphasis added).

But even assuming that failure to consider a relevant factor
could be harmless error, it was not here. The 2020 Guidance did
not state that existing marketing and sales-access-restriction plans
were categorically ineffective for electronic nicotine-delivery sys-
tems other than flavored, cartridge-based products. See 2020 Guid-
ance, supra, at 21-22, 44-45. Contra Wages & White Lion Invs.,
L.L.C. v. Food & Drug Admin., No. 21-60766, slip op. at 20-21 (5th
Cir. July 18, 2022); Prohibition Juice Co. v. U.S. Food & Drug Ad-
min., No. 21-1201, slip op. at 31 (D.C. Cir. July 26, 2022). And the
tobacco companies submitted marketing and_sales-access-re-
striction plans that conformed with the recommendations for their
kinds of products in the 2020 Guidance, directly addressed the con-
cerns of youth access and popularity, and included measures not
specifically mentioned in the 2020 Guidance, such as Johnny Cop-
per’s “Trace/ Verify technology” and Bidi’s authentication system
designed to prevent counterfeit products from becoming accessible
to youth. Because “the [Administration] may reach a different re-

sult when it” considers the marketing and sales-access-restriction
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 29

plans, “we cannot say that the [Administration’s] error was harm-
less.” See Schwarzbaum, 24 F.4th at 1366 (internal quotation marks
omitted); see also Shinseki v. Sanders, 556 U.S. 396, 410 (2009) (“To
say that the claimant has the ‘burden’ of showing that an error was
harmful is not to impose a complex system of ‘burden shifting’
rules or a particularly onerous requirement. ... Often the circum-
stances of the case will make clear to the appellate judge that the
ruling, if erroneous, was harmful and nothing further need be

said.”).

Our conclusion that it was arbitrary and capricious for the
Administration to ignore the relevant marketing and sales-access-
restriction plans does not mandate a different result on remand.
We acknowledge the evidence in the record catalogued by the dis-
sent of the serious risk to youth, and it may be that the Administra-
tion will conclude on remand that the marketing and sales-access-
restriction plans submitted in the tobacco companies’ applications
do not outweigh those risks. We do not make a moral judgment—
only a procedural one. Our review of the administrative orders is
limited, and we decide only that the Administration must at least
consider the relevant evidence before it, which includes the com-

panies’ marketing and sales-access-restriction plans.

The crux of our disagreement with the dissent is whether it
is the role of this Court or of the Administration to consider the
novel marketing and sales-access-restriction plans submitted by the
tobacco companies. The dissent admits that the Administration

“said that” marketing and sales-access restrictions “would be
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30 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

relevant,” see Dissenting Op. at 1, and that at least some of the to-
bacco companies submitted novel marketing and sales-access re-
strictions, see id. at 20. But the dissent concludes that “these plans
... do nothing to change the attractiveness to kids of using flavored
vaping products,” as the Administration “has found that kids gen-
erally get their vaping products from friends and their social net-
works, not directly from retailers.” See id. at 18-19. But this deter-

mination is not ours to make.

“[FJederal appellate courts... are not factfinders,” Holsey v.
Warden, Ga. Diagnostic Prison, 694 F.3d 1230, 1259 (11th Cir.
2012), and “a remand is the proper course unless the record permits
only one resolution of the factual issue,” Pullman-Standard v.
Swint, 456 U.S. 273, 292 (1982). Because it is outside of our compe-
tency to determine what interventions make flavored vapes more
or less accessible to minors, remand to the Administration is the
proper remedy. See Schwarzbaum, 24 F.4th at 1365 (“Remand is
the appropriate remedy when an administrative agency makes an
error of law, for it affords the agency an opportunity to receive and
examine the evidence in light of the correct legal principle.” (inter-
nal quotation marks omitted)); Pres. Endangered Areas of Cobb’s
Hist., Inc. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engrs, 87 F.3d 1242, 1246 (11th
Cir. 1996) (“[I]f the agency has not considered all relevant factors
... the proper course, except in rare circumstances, is to remand to
the agency for additional investigation or explanation.” (internal
quotation marks omitted); cf United States v. Phifer, 909 F.3d 372,
386 (11th Cir. 2018) (remanding to the district court to conduct an
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 31

evidentiary hearing to determine which definitions of a scientific
term in a regulation “are generally accepted within the scientific

community. ”).

We also disagree with our sister circuits’ contrary decisions
in Wages & White Lion, slip op. at 19-24, and Prohibition Juice,
slip op. at 29-32. For starters, we are not persuaded by our sister
circuits’ readings of the 2020 Guidance. Both of our sister circuits
read the 2020 Guidance to make categorical statements about the
efficacy and relevance of marketing and sales-access restrictions
with respect to flavored electronic nicotine-delivery systems. See
Wages & White Lion, slip op. at 20 (“[The tobacco companies]
should have known that marketing plans on their own are not par-
ticularly useful. [The Administration] explained as much in its 2020
Guidance, in which it noted that youth usage continued to rise de-
spite [the Administration’s] 2018 efforts to curb predatory market-
ing....”); Prohibition Juice, slip op. at 31 (“Yet [the tobacco com-
panies’] plans—to require customers’ self-verification of age at the
point of sale and to use what they characterize as less vibrant mar-
keting unappealing to youth—track measures the [Administration]
in its 2020 [G]uidance deemed inadequate to prevent or otherwise
materially limit youth access to favored [products].”). To be sure,
the 2020 Guidance states that “youth usage continued to rise de-
spite [the Administration’s] 2018 efforts to curb predatory market-
ing, Wages & White Lion, slip op. at 20 (citing 2020 Guidance,
supra, at 6-9), and that “age verification alone is not sufficient to

address this issue,” 2020 Guidance, supra, at 44. But those
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32 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

observations were not the end of the Administration’s analysis;

they were only the beginning.

As explained above, the Administration responded to these
data by setting forth two frameworks. With respect to flavored,
cartridge-based systems, the Administration determined that “fo-
cusing on how the product was sold would not appropriately ad-
dress youth use of the products that are most popular among
youth,” as “[t]hese products are produced on a large scale, are easy
to conceal, can be used discreetly, and are not the products typi-
cally produced in vape shops that mix nicotine with e-liquid fla-
vors.” 2020 Guidance, supra, at 21. And “[g]iven the urgent need to
address the dramatic rise in youth use,” the 2020 Guidance “priori-
tize[d] enforcement with respect to any flavored, cartridge-based
[electronic nicotine-delivery system] products ... without regard

to the location or method of sale.” Jd

But with respect to other electronic nicotine-delivery sys-
tems, the Administration explained that it “intend[ed] to prioritize
enforcement for lack of marketing authorization for any” elec-
tronic nicotine-delivery system products “when the manufacturer
has not taken or is not taking adequate measures to prevent mi-
nors’ access to these products.” Id. (emphasis added). And “[iJn as-
sessing whether a manufacturer is taking (or has taken) adequate
measures to prevent minors’ access,” the Administration “in-
tend[ed] to consider” “factors ... includ[ing] ... [w]hether the
manufacturer ha[d] implemented adequate programs to monitor

retailer compliance with age-verification and sales restrictions”
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 33

such as hotlines for reporting noncompliant sales and mystery
shopper programs; “ha[d] established and enforce[d] penalties
against retailers that fail to comply with age-verification and sales
restrictions’; was “us[ing] adequate age-verification technology”
for online sales, such as “an independent, third-party age- and iden-
tity-verification service that compares customer information
against third-party data sources, such as public records”; and was
“limit[ing] ... the quantity of ... products that a customer may

purchase within a given period of time.” /d at 22.

So, the 2020 Guidance did not express a determination by
the Administration that marketing and sales-access-restriction
plans for flavored electronic nicotine-delivery systems are categor-
ically ineffective. The 2020 Guidance provided that those measures
were insufficient to curb youth use of flavored, cartridge-based
products based on their nature and popularity. But with respect to
other kinds of electronic nicotine-delivery systems, including the
flavored but not cartridge-based products submitted by the tobacco
companies here, the 2020 Guidance stated that the Administration
intended to consider the companies’ marketing and sales-access-re-
striction plans. And the Administration’s responses to submitted
comments about the failure of marketing and sales-access re-
strictions to prevent youth use, are, when read in context, about
flavored, cartridge-based products, not all flavored electronic nico-
tine-delivery systems. Compare id. at 42 (“[The Administration] de-
termined that focusing on how the product was sold would not be

sufficient to address youth use of these products.”), with id. at 21
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34 Opinion of the Court 21-13340

(“[The Administration] determined that focusing on how the prod-
uct was sold would not appropriately address youth use of the
products that are the most popular among youth—ze., flavored,
cartridge-based products.”), and id. (“[The Administration] intends
to prioritize enforcement for lack of a marketing authorization for
any other [electronic nicotine-delivery system] products (Ze., any
tobacco-, menthol-, or non-flavored [electronic nicotine-delivery
system] products and any non-cartridge-based, flavored [electronic
nicotine-delivery system] products) when the manufacturer has
not taken or is not taking adequate measures to prevent minors’
access to these products... .”). The 2020 Guidance did not absolve
the Administration of the requirement to consider the tobacco

companies’ youth-prevention plans.

This appeal is also different from those before our sister cir-
cuits in several ways. First, our harmless-error standard is different
from the standard imposed by the Fifth Circuit. Compare Schwarz-
baum, 24 F.4th at 1366 (“An agency decision is harmless when a
mistake of the administrative body is one that clearly had no bear-
ing on the procedure used or the substance of decision reached.”
(internal quotation marks omitted)), with Wages & White Lion,
slip op. at 23 (“The burden falls on [the tobacco companies] to
show that they would have received authorization had [the Admin-
istration] considered these plans.”). Second, the statements made
before the Fifth Circuit at oral argument by the Administration that
it “review[ed] ... a summary of the marketing plans,” Wages &

White Lion, slip op. at 22, were not made before this Court. And
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21-13340 Opinion of the Court 35

third, the concessions of harmless error made before the D.C. Cir-
cuit at oral argument by the tobacco companies, see Prohibition
Juice, slip op. at 31, were not made here. See id. at 35-36 (Katsas,
J., concurring) (“As [the majority opinion] persuasively demon-
strates, the petitioners here made no serious argument that the
[Administration’s] failure to consider their marketing plans was
prejudicial, as required for them to obtain relief under the [Admin-
istrative Procedure Act]. . . . In joining the Court’s opinion, I do not
understand it to foreclose the possibility of our finding prejudicial
error in other cases where manufacturers press the prejudice point

more forcefully.”).
IV. CONCLUSION

The petitions for review are GRANTED, the orders of the
Administration are SET ASIDE, and the matters are REMANDED

to the Administration.
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 1

ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, Dissenting:

SPOILER ALERT: THIS OPINION CONTAINS
SPOILERS ON HOW THE U.S. FOOD AND DRUG
ADMINISTRATION (“FDA”) WILL RESOLVE PETITIONER
VAPING-PRODUCT! COMPANIES’ PREMARKET TOBACCO
PRODUCT APPLICATIONS ON REMAND FROM) THIS
APPEAL.

Then again, never mind. There’s nothing to spoil here. An-
yone who knows all the relevant facts necessarily already knows
how this one ends. On remand, the FDA will deny Petitioner Com-
panies’ applications to sell their fruit-, mint-, and candy-flavored
(“flavored”) vaping products.2. The record makes that clear. I
would not waste everyone’s time and money with aremand. The
Majority faults the FDA for not considering the Companies’ pro-
posed restrictions on kids’ use. And to be sure, the FDA said that
factor would be relevant. But even assuming that the FDA erred

when it didn’t consider the Companies’ proposed marketing and

 

! The industry and the FDA refer to vaping products as electronic-nicotine-
delivery-system (“ENDS”) products. Because ENDS products are commonly
known as “vaping products,” that is the term I use in this dissent.

2 To be clear, I use the term “flavored” to refer to vaping products with flavors
like fruit, mint, and candy—in other words, nontraditional tobacco-product
flavors. Vaping-product companies also make tobacco-flavored products. I
do not include tobacco-flavored products in my defined term “flavored” vap-
ing products. Rather, I refer to them distinctly as “tobacco-flavored.”
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2 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

access-restriction plans, the FDA’s framework for evaluating pre-
market tobacco product applications leaves no room for doubt that
the FDA will deny—in fact, under the Family Smoking Prevention
and Tobacco Control Act, must deny—the applications on remand.

To paraphrase the Borg,> then, remand is futile.

Here’s how we know: The FDA has established that the sale
of flavored (as opposed to tobacco-flavored) vaping products am-
plifies the risk that kids will start vaping and—because vaping has
been shown to be a gateway to smoking combustible cigarettes—
smoking. Yet at the same time, there’s no reliable evidence that
flavored vaping products offer any real advantage over tobacco-fla-
vored vaping products in helping existing smokers quit or reduce
their habits. Nor, despite years of trying (and consideration of var-
ious creative programs), has the FDA been able to identify any mar-
keting or access restrictions that work in a meaningful way to pre-
vent kids from obtaining flavored vaping products in the first place.
In fact, the FDA has concluded that access restrictions at points of
sale do not work because most kids get their vaping products

through friends or their social networks.

So the FDA has stated that applications that don’t reliably
establish that flavored vaping products impart an advantage over

tobacco-flavored vaping products in decreasing smoking among

 

3 See https: //nerdist.com/article/star-trek-history-of-the-bore/ dast visited
Aug. 10, 2022).

 
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 38 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 3

existing smokers, or that don’t include marketing plans and access
restrictions for kids that significantly cut off all avenues for kids to
obtain these products will be denied because they are not appropri-
ate for the protection of the public health. And the Tobacco Con-
trol Act requires the FDA to deny any application that is not appro-
priate for the protection of the public health.

Here, none of the Companies’ applications include reliable
evidence that flavored vaping products offer an advantage over to-
bacco-flavored vaping products in decreasing smoking among ex-
isting smokers. And while some applications suggest some new
ways to reduce kids’ access to flavored products, none contain mar-
keting and access plans that provide new methods (that the FDA
has not already considered and found wanting) that significantly
decrease kids’ access to their flavored products through all avenues
kids use to obtain the products. But the FDA’s evidence shows that
when companies apply pressure to one aspect of the current access
system, youth simply flock to other avenues to obtain flavored vap-
ing products. So the FDA has made it clear that applications like
the ones here—which fail to offer new plans that significantly cur-
tail youth access across all avenues of obtaining flavored prod-
ucts—cannot be appropriate for the protection of the public health

and must be denied.

When, as here, the outcome on agency remand is “not seri-
ously contestable,” remanding “would be an idle and useless for-
mality.”. NLRB v. Wyman-Gordon Co., 394 U.S. 759, 766 n.6
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4 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

(1969) (plurality opinion). The Administrative Procedure Act au-
thorizes the denial of a petition for review under these circum-
stances because any error the agency may have committed is then,
by definition, harmless. And as the Supreme Court has expressly
explained—and contrary to the Majority Opinion’s contention—
“the ruling in [SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80 (1943),] [does]
not require[] [us] to remand in futility.” Thornburgh v. Am. Coll.
of Obstetricians & Gynecologists, 476 U.S. 747, 756 n.7 (1986),
overtuled on other grounds by Planned Parenthood of Se. Penn. v.
Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992).

I see no point in sending these petitions back for the FDA to
do what everyone paying attention here knows that, under the
framework the FDA has established for evaluating whether a new
flavored vaping product is appropriate for the protection of the
public health, the FDA will and must do: deny the applications.
Engaging in this futile activity only delays the inevitable—and in
the process imposes unnecessary time, effort, and financial costs on

all involved. I therefore respectfully dissent.

I divide my discussion into two parts. In Section I, I set forth
the facts in the administrative record that show that the FDA will
deny these applications on remand. In Section II, I explain why,
assuming without deciding that the FDA erred in denying the ap-
plications without reviewing the marketing and access plans, re-

mand is not appropriate.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 40 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 5

A, The Regulatory Framework

Congress enacted the Family Smoking Prevention and To-
bacco Control Act (“Act”) in 2009. In so doing, Congress wanted
to be sure its intent in passing the law was clear. So as part of the
legislation and so no confusion could exist, Congress made legisla-
tive findings of fact. Foremost among those factual findings, Con-
gress determined that “[t]he use of tobacco products by the Na-
tion’s children is a pediatric disease of considerable proportions . . .
.” 21 U.S.C. § 387 Findings at § (1). It followed up, noting that
“[v]irtually all new users of tobacco products are under the mini-
mum legal age to purchase such products.” Jd. § (4); see also id. §
(31) (‘An overwhelming majority of Americans who use tobacco
products begin using such products while they are minors and be-
come addicted to the nicotine in those products before reaching

the age of 18.”).4

Besides these findings, Congress attributed the problem of
underage use of tobacco products largely to the tobacco industry’s
marketing practices. Recounting that, in 2005, manufacturers

“spent more than $13 [billion]” on advertising, marketing, and

 

4 Among other evidence, the FDA conducted a study in 1996 and found that,
at that time, 82% of all adults who had ever smoked had their first cigarette
before they turned 18. NMicopure Labs, LLC v. FDA, 944 F.3d 267, 272 (D.C.
Cir. 2019) (citing Regulations Restricting the Sale and Distribution of Ciga-
rettes and Smokeless Tobacco to Protect Children and Adolescents, 61 Fed.
Reg. 44,396, 44,398 (Aug. 28, 1996).
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 41 of 70

6 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

promotion of their products, Congress found that these efforts
were “especially directed to attract young persons to use tobacco
products, and these efforts have resulted in increased use of such
products by youth.” Jd. J (16), (15); see also id. § (31) (Tobacco
advertising and promotion play a crucial role in the decision of
these minors to begin using tobacco products.”). For these reasons,
Congress concluded that “[i]t [was] in the public interest for Con-
gress to adopt legislation to address the public health crisis created
by actions of the tobacco industry.” Jd. ¥ (29).

Because the window for starting to use tobacco products is
open widest for younger users, Congress reasoned, if that window
were closed, many would-be younger users would never begin us-
ing tobacco products. Indeed, Congress theorized that even if bet-
ter control of access to tobacco products for youth reduced the
products’ use by minors by only 50%, that would “sav[e] over [3
million] of them from premature death due to tobacco-induced dis-
ease.” Jd. § (14). And at least as of the time Congress enacted the
Act, it figured that cutting minors’ use of tobacco products in half
“would also result in approximately [$75 billion] in savings attribut-
able to reduced health care costs.” Jd No doubt that figure is con-
siderably higher now.

Congress also expressly identified the problem that “prod-
ucts that purport to reduce the risks to the public of tobacco use”
but actually do not, present to creating new tobacco-product users.

Id. § (37).
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 42 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 7

To address these problems, through the Act, Congress re-
quired manufacturers to submit all new tobacco products for FDA
review and approval before they could be marketed in interstate
commerce. See 21 U.S.C. § 387j. The Act imposes strict limitations
on new tobacco products the FDA can approve for marketing.
More specifically, the Act prohibits the FDA from approving any
such application when “there is a lack of a showing that permitting
such tobacco product to be marketed would be appropriate for the
protection of the public health.” /d § 387j(c)(2). And it defines this
standard as requiring a showing “with respect to the risks and ben-
efits to the population as a whole, including users and nonusers” of
the new product. /d. § 387j(c)(4). That showing must account for
both “the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of
tobacco products will stop using such products; and the increased
or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products

will start using such products.” Jd.

Put simply, for a new product to be appropriate for the pro-
tection of the public health (and therefore even be eligible to obtain
FDA approval), the Act requires the applicant to show that, on bal-
ance, the new product will result in more existing product users
(like smokers) stopping or meaningfully drawing back their usage
than existing nonusers becoming users. On its face, this equation
prioritizes Congress’s concern to shut down tobacco-product usage

as a “pediatric disease of considerable proportions.”
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 43 of 70

8 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

Enter vaping products. Believe it or not, Joseph Robinson
filed a patent for the first e-cigarette design nearly a century ago—
in 1927.9 But it wasn’t until the 2000s that vaping products began
to be sold in the United States and hit the bigtime here.®

Under the authority the Act gave it, the FDA issued a final
rule, effective August 2016, in which it deemed vaping products to
be “tobacco products.” See Deeming Tobacco Products to be Sub-
ject to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 81 Fed. Reg.
28,973 (May 10, 2016) (codified at C.F.R. pts. 1100, 1140, 1143)
(“Deeming Rule”).” Asa result, products that were not on the mar-
ket as of February 15, 2007, became subject to the Act. See id. at
28,978. But in exercising its discretion, the FDA announced that it

wouldn’t enforce the Act against those vaping products for certain

 

> Hilary Brueck, Insider, The Wild History of Vaping, From a 1927 ‘Electric
Vaporizer’ to Today's Mysterious Lung Injury Crisis (Nov. 12, 2019), available
at https: / /www.insider.com/history-of-vaping-who-invented-e-cigs-2019-

10##in-1927-joseph-robinson-dreamed-up-what-might-be-the-very-first-elec-

 

tric-vaporizer-a-device-he-said-was-for-medicinal-compounds-2 (last visited
Aug. 16, 2022).

 

6 See id.

7 That final rule is not at issue, and our sister circuits that have considered the
issue have upheld the rule. See, e.g., Nicopure Labs, 944 F.3d at 293 (uphold-
ing final rule against challenges under the Administrative Procedure Act and
the First Amendment); Big Time Vapes, Inc. v. FDA, 963 F.3d 436 (5th Cir.
2020) (upholding final rule against nondelegation-doctrine challenge).
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 44 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 9

delineated periods to allow for the development of more infor-

mation about the products. See id.

Ultimately, companies wound up having until September 9,
2020, to submit their applications for premarket review of their
vaping products and establish that the marketing of those products
was “appropriate for the protection of the public health.” Breeze
Smoke, LLC v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin., 18 F.4th 499, 504 (6th
Cir. 2021); accord Enforcement Priorities for Electronic Nicotine
Delivery Systems and Other Deemed Products on the Market
Without Premarket Authorization (Revised), 85 Fed. Reg. 23,973,
23,974 (Apr. 30, 2020) (“2020 Guidance”).

B. The Underage Vaping Problem

In the meantime, though, the FDA learned a lot more about
vaping. It turns out that vaping dishes out a double-whammy of
detrimental health effects on kids who engage in it: (1) vaping itself
has been associated with direct and profound health consequences,
including, among others, “the development of acute or chronic
lung injuries” and even death (not to mention battery explosions

from vaping products),8 and (2) those who vape are substantially

 

8 And nicotine in vaping products can permanently harm developing adoles-
cent brains and can “induce short and long-term deficits in attention, learning,
and memory.” Bidi Vapor Technical Project Lead Rev. (“Bidi TPL”), at 8; Di-
amond Vapor Technical Project Lead Rev. (“Diamond TPL”), at 8; Johnny
Copper Technical Project Lead Rev. (“Johnny Copper TPL”), at 8; Vapor Un-
limited Technical Project Lead Rev. (“Unlimited TPL”), at 8; Union Street
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 45 of 70

10 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

more likely to become smokers of combustible cigarettes, which in
turn inflict significant adverse health consequences of their own.
2020 Guidance at 9, 13, 29; see also Bidi TPL? at 8 (“A 2017 system-
atic review and meta-analysis that summarized nine prospective
cohort studies found significantly higher odds of smoking initiation
... among youth who had used [vaping products] a[s] compared to
youth who had not.... The 2018 NASEM report concluded that
there is substantial evidence that [vaping-product] use increases
risk of ever using combusted tobacco cigarettes among youth and
young adults.”); 9 (“TI'wo studies found associations between [vap-
ing] and self-reported history of asthma, chronic bronchitis, em-
physema, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease .. . .”); see also
Diamond TPL at 8-9; Johnny Copper TPL at 8-9; Unlimited TPL
at 8-9; Union TPL at 8-9; Pop TPL at 8-9.

Flavored vaping products in particular play an outsized role
in the problem of kids’ vaping. In fact, among kids between the
ages of 12 and 17 who have reported vaping, nearly all—93.2%—
have said that they had their first vaping experience with a flavored
product. 2020 Guidance at 14. Perhaps that’s no surprise, given
that many companies (including some Petitioners here) name their

flavors things like Rainbow Nerds, Captain Loopy, Berry Gogurt,

 

Technical Project Lead Rev. (“Union TPL”), at 8; Pop Vapor Technical Project
Lead Rev. (“Pop TPL”), at 8.

9 “TPL.” is short for “technical project lead review,” which is what the FDA
calls its evaluation of a premarket tobacco application.
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 11

Nanner Puddin, Scrumdiddlyumptious, Teacher’s Pet, Cap'n
Crunk, and Blue Razz Cotton Candy!°—which seem designed to
appeal to kids. Not only do most kids have their first vaping expe-
rience with flavored products, but flavored vaping products remain
“extraordinar[ily] popular[]” with kids even after that first introduc-
tion. 2020 Guidance at 13-14. Indeed, kids “overwhelmingly” use
flavored vaping products, id. at 24, and are “more likely to use fla-
vored [vaping products] than adult [vapers are],” Bidi TPL at 12;
Diamond TPL at 12; Johnny Copper TPL at 12; Unlimited TPL at
12; Union TPL at 12; Pop TPL at 9.

As the problem with youth vaping began to come into focus
in 2018, the FDA tried to solve it with a two-pronged approach: (1)
regulatory actions against manufacturers and retailers who mar-
keted and sold to kids and (2) direct enlistment of vaping-product
manufacturers to reduce youth interest and access. 2020 Guidance
at 6-7. To accomplish the second part of this approach, the FDA
asked manufacturers to submit plans to “address minors’ access to

and use of [their] products.” /d at 7.

As directed, manufacturers responded by introducing vari-
ous programs intended to safeguard against underage use of their
products. See id As a sampling, they tried things like mystery

shopper programs that monitored retailer compliance with age-

 

10 Readers may notice that some of these names seem to allude to—or out-
right invoke—breakfast cereals, snacks, and candies marketed to kids.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 47 of 70

12 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

verification and sales restrictions, contractual penalties for retailers
who sold vaping products to kids, age-verification and identity-ver-
ification services for sales over websites, and limiting single-pur-

chase quantities. /d.

Nothing worked. And here’s why, in large part: as the FDA
explained in its 2020 Guidance, “many [kids] obtain their [vaping
products] from friends or sources in their social networks.” /d at
44-45. So “age verification,” “focusing on how the product [is]
sold, ... legal prohibitions, and .. . voluntary actions by some man-
ufacturers” are “not sufficient to address youth use of these prod-
ucts, given the many sources of products available for youth ac-
cess.” /d. That’s an important point: the FDA announced in its
2020 Guidance that it had concluded, after studying the problem
for years, that sales-access restrictions and marketing plans just

aren’t enough to protect against youth use. 1!

 

11 The FDA reiterated this point at oral argument: its 2020 Guidance con-
cludes that sales-access restrictions and marketing plans aren’t sufficient to
protect youth. Oral Argument, Case No. 21-13522, at 22:49-23:12. As the
FDA emphasized, “The problem here is that when you limit who you can sell
e-cigarettes to—for instance, only sell them to adults with very good ID—the
problem is that kids often get e-cigarettes from friends or family, and so limit-
ing just who you sell an e-cigarette to is not going to be enough to mitigate
that substantial risk to kids from flavored e-cigarettes.” /d at 22:08—22:28. The
FDA then confirmed, “FDA’s saying that sales-access restrictions and advertis-
ing restrictions, although they certainly can be helpful, they themselves are
not sufficient to mitigate the substantial risk to kids when you have this scien-
tific consensus on a substantial risk to kids, and you have a lack of a showing
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 13

Indeed, despite companies’ marketing and access-restriction
efforts in response to the FDA’s attempts to stem the underage-
vaping problem, underage vaping instead accelerated. See id. at 8.
By 2019, youth vaping had hit the highest levels recorded until
then. /d Between 2017 and 2019, vaping more than doubled
among middle-school and high-school students, reaching levels of
10.5% of middle-school students and 27.5%—more than a quar-
ter—of all high-school students. /d at 12. In absolute numbers,
that’s more than 5 million kids. Id

To state the obvious, youth vaping had reached crisis pro-
portions. And the FDA came to the well-supported conclusion that
marketing plans and access restrictions alone were not solving the

problem.

But it wasn’t all bad news. It turns out that vaping products
may help existing smokers to quit or switch to vaping, which is less
detrimental than smoking. See Bidi TPL at 10; Diamond TPL at
10; Johnny Copper TPL at 10; Unlimited TPL at 10; Union TPL at
10; Pop TPL at 10; see also FDA Technical Project Lead Rev. for
Apps. Submitted by RJ. Reynolds Vapor Co. (Oct. 12, 2021) (“RJ.
Reynolds TPL”), at 4. And in the existing-smoker population, “the

most preferred flavor . . . [is] the tobacco . . . flavor compared to

 

ofa benefit, marketing plans, including sales-access restrictions and advertising
restrictions, they can’t close the gap.” /d. at 22:49-23:12.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 49 of 70

14 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

non-tobacco flavors (e.g., mint, nectar, and tropical).” RJ. Reyn-
olds TPL at 4.

It’s just that studies don’t reveal significant added benefits
that flavored products offer over tobacco-flavored products in this
regard. See 2020 Guidance at 38; see also Bidi TPL at 11 (“[TJhe
evidence regarding the role of flavors in promoting switching
among adult smokers is far from conclusive.[] In fact, the findings
are quite mixed and as a result the literature does not establish that
flavors differentially promote switching amongst [vaping product]
users in general.”); Diamond TPL at 11; Johnny Copper TPL at 11;
Unlimited TPL at 11; Union TPL at 11; Pop TPL at 11-12; see also
RJ. Reynolds TPL at 20 (“[F]indings from the applicant’s likeli-
hood-of-use study suggest that current established cigarette smok-
ers are more likely to prefer original (tobacco) flavor relative to
other flavors... .”). In other words, the FDA was aware of no
reliable evidence showing that existing smokers who used vaping
products to quit or reduce their smoking would decide not to use
vaping products in that way if manufacturers sold only tobacco-

flavored vaping products.

Yet while the evidence did not show that the flavored vaping
products made any significant difference to whether existing smok-
ers would quit, those products played the starring role in introduc-
ing a whole new generation to the dangers of vaping and smoking.
See 2020 Guidance at 14; see alsoRJ. Reynolds TPL at 4 (“Existing

evidence consistently indicates that use of tobacco-flavored [vaping
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 15

products] is less common compared to .. . flavored [vaping prod-
ucts] among youth.”), 17 (noting that research showed that “the
prevalence of tobacco flavor was 2.9% among 10th and 12th grad-
ers”!2). And on top of that—and despite the manufacturers’ re-
peated and concentrated efforts—no manufacturer to that point
had devised a marketing or sales-access plan that slashed youth vap-
ing.
C. The FDA’s Denial of the Petitioners’ Applications

To sum up, the FDA tried to address the underage vaping
problem by cutting it off at what it originally believed to be the
source: manufacturers and retailers of vaping products. But the
FDA discovered that access restrictions do not work because kids
often get their vaping products from friends and through their so-

cial networks—not directly from manufacturers or retailers.

For this reason, the FDA recognized that the very existence
of flavored vaping products themselves is the problem when it
comes to kids’ use: as long as the products exist, kids will get their
hands on them. So without an effective means of making the prod-
ucts significantly less attractive to kids, no sales-access restrictions
or marketing plans matter. Indeed, the FDA’s efforts to solve the

problem of kids’ use by securing the cooperation of the

 

12 Ninth- and eleventh-graders were not included in the survey. See
https: / /nida.nih.gov/research-topics/related-topics/trends-statistics /in-

 

fographics/monitoring-future-2020-survey-results (last visited Aug. 10, 2022).

 
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 51 of 70

16 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

manufacturing companies failed. But in the meantime, the FDA
learned that flavored vaping products in particular are what kids
find attractive about vaping and that no reliable evidence to date
shows that those products offer any significant advantage over to-
bacco-flavored vaping products when it comes to cessation or

meaningful reduction of existing smokers’ smoking.

So after a few years of learning these things the hard way, by
the time the September 2020 deadline for filing applications for pre-
market approval for the marketing of vaping products came
around, the FDA found itself left with a no-brainer under the Act’s
appropriate-for-the-protection-of-the-public-health standard. On
one side of the equation, flavored vaping products overwhelmingly
inspired a new generation to take up vaping and (and then smok-
ing). And on the other side, the companies that sought approval of
those flavored products could not establish any significant benefit
over tobacco-flavored vaping products in helping existing smokers
quit or meaningfully reduce their smoking. Given that situation,
the plain text of the Act required the FDA to conclude that—bar-
ring some new evidence that meaningfully altered either (or both)
of these circumstances—flavored vaping products were not appro-
priate for the protection of the public health. After all, they did not
come close to having a net positive effect on the public health. Just

the opposite.

That brings us to the Companies’ applications for pre-

marketing approval. Only those aspects of these applications that
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 17

concern flavored vaping products are at issue. The Companies’ ap-
plications included marketing and sales-access restriction plans.
Those plans identified some strategies aimed at reducing youth
use, such as eliminating kid-friendly advertising and labeling, using
age-gated websites to sell the Companies’ vaping products, and
limiting the quantity of vaping products that one person could pur-
chase at a time. Bidi Vapor’s marketing plan also showed it had
ceased selling its vaping products directly to consumers online
through its website. And Johnny Copper’s showed it planned to
implement a program called “Trace/Verify” to identify the adult
purchaser of its vaping product if that product ended up in the
hands of a kid. In other words, all the Companies’ applications in-
cluded only marketing and sales-access restrictions plans—the
same types of plans that the FDA had already announced in its 2020
Guidance were not enough to mitigate the dangers that flavored

vaping products present to kids.

So not surprisingly, the FDA denied the Companies’ appli-
cations, despite their inclusion of these marketing and access-re-
striction strategies. When it denied the applications, the FDA
noted in the TPLs for each Company that “[lJimiting youth access
and exposure to marketing is a critical aspect of product regula-
tion.” Bidi TPL at 11 n.xix; Diamond TPL at 11 n.xix; Johnny TPL
at 11 n.xix; Unlimited TPL at 11 n.xix; Union TPL at 11 n.xix; Pop
TPL at 9 n.xxii.
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18 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

Yet, the FDA observed, in its extensive experience reviewing
marketing plans and access restrictions, it had yet to see anything
that worked to decrease the allure of vaping to kids and kids’ access
to vaping products “such that the risk for youth initiation would be
reduced.” /d. And given “the substantial concerns, and supporting
evidence” about kids’ pervasive use of flavored vaping products,
the FDA reasoned that, without any reliable evidence “to address
and counter-balance” that problem (meaning kids would not use
the flavored vaping products under review or the products would
provide a meaningful enough (or even any) proven advantage over
tobacco-flavored vaping products in helping existing smokers quit
so as to “counter-balance” kids’ use), the Companies’ marketing
and sales-access-restriction plans, in the real world, could never be
enough. /d. 13 So, the FDA opined, there was no point in review-

ing them.

 

13 The complete text of the footnote that the FDA included in each
TPL providing this information stated,

Limiting youth access and exposure to marketing is a
critical aspect of product regulation. It is theoretically possible
that significant mitigation efforts could adequately reduce
youth access and appeal such that the risk for youth initiation
would be reduced. However, to date, none of the ENDS
PMT'As that FDA has evaluated have proposed advertising and
promotion restrictions that would decrease appeal to youth to
a degree significant enough to address and counter-balance the
substantial concerns, and supporting evidence, discussed
above regarding youth use. Similarly, we are not aware of
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 19

Assuming without deciding that the FDA erred in not eval-
uating the Companies’ marketing and sales-access-restriction plans,
then, the question we must consider is whether the FDA’s review
of these things in the Companies’ applications could possibly mat-

ter to the FDA’s new decision if we remand.

We know the answer to that: It couldn’t. The record unmis-

takably shows the futility in remanding.

We know this because, as the FDA recounted in its 2020
Guidance, the FDA’s experience already shows that nearly all the
marketing plans and access restrictions the Companies submitted
have a proven track record of failing to make any significant head-
way in the reduction of kids’ use of flavored vaping products. For
example, FDA’s 2020 Guidance explained that it had already issued
warning letters to retailers using kid-friendly advertising—but stop-
ping that advertising wasn’t enough to eliminate kids’ interest in
vaping. The Guidance also specifically referenced age-gating web-
sites and limiting the quantity of vaping products sold to a single
customer as “potential safeguards” that FDA thought, in 2018,
could help. But by 2020, the data revealed that these types of fixes

 

access restrictions that, to date, have been successful in suffi-
ciently decreasing the ability of youth to obtain and use ENDS.
Accordingly, for the sake of efficiency, the evaluation of the
marketing plans in applications will not occur at this stage of
review, and we have not evaluated any marketing plans sub-
mitted with these applications.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 55 of 70

20 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

were not effective in preventing the real-world problem of keeping

kids from obtaining vaping products.

As for any novel access-restriction plans the Companies sub-
mitted, there were only two among all the Companies’ plans: Bidi
proposed not to sell its products online at all, and Johnny Copper
proposed its “Trace/Verify” strategy. But these plans—admirable
as they may be—do nothing to change the attractiveness to kids of
using flavored vaping products. And as the FDA has established its
framework for evaluation of the premarket applications, that’s
where the heart of the problem lies, since the FDA has found that
kids generally get their vaping products from friends and their so-
cial networks, not directly from retailers. It is that finding that, in
the absence of evidence showing that flavored vaping products sig-
nificantly contribute to smoking cessation among existing smok-
ers—drives the conclusion that the marketing of flavored vaping
products is necessarily not appropriate for the protection of the
public health. So there can be no question that, on remand, the
FDA will again deny the Companies’ applications. Indeed, the
TCA requires it to do so.

I.

Given that we know the FDA will again deny these
applications on remand, we must consider whether we must re-
mand them to the FDA, anyway. We need not. And on this rec-
ord, we should not. Remanding here ensures wasted time, energy,

and money.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 56 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21

The Administrative Procedure Act requires courts to “du[ly]
account” for “the rule of prejudicial error” when considering
whether to remand matters to the deciding agency. 5 U.S.C. § 706.
In other words, if it’s clear from the record that correcting the
FDA’s error would not change the outcome of the Companies’ ap-
plications, the error did not result in “prejudicial error,” and re-

mand is not warranted.

As I’ve explained, that’s precisely the case here. Re-

mand is futile.

The Majority Opinion relies on United States v. Schwarz-
baum, 24 F.4th 1355, 1367 (11th Cir. 2022), to reach the opposite
conclusion. But Schwarzbaum itself acknowledged that the re-
mand rule from Chenery, 318 U.S. 80, “does not require courts to
remand in futility.” 24 F.4th at 1367 (quoting Ridgewood Health
Care Ctr., Inc. v. NLRB, 8 F.4th 1263, 1276 (11th Cir. 2021)). Judge
Posner, relying on the words of Judge Friendly, has explained why:
“Chenery was intended only to establish the important point that
a reviewing court could not affirm an agency on a principle the
agency might not embrace.” Jlinois v. ICC, 722 F.2d 1341, 1349
(7th Cir. 1983) (internal quotation marks omitted). As Judge Pos-
ner and Judge Friendly have further noted, Chenery was “not [in-
tended] to require the tedious process of administrative adjudica-
tion and judicial review to be needlessly dragged out while court
and agency engage in a nigh endless game of battledore and shut-

tlecock with respect to subsidiary findings.” Jd.
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22 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

The Majority Opinion disagrees. See Maj. Op. at 27-28. It
asserts that this dissent makes “fact[ual] find[ings]” and suggests I
engage in a “moral judgment.” /d. at 30, 29.

But as the administrative record reflects, that’s just not accu-
rate. Rather, as I’ve shown above, the administrative record itself
unambiguously reveals that, as of the time the FDA denied the
Companies’ petitions, it had concluded that (1) eliminating adver-
tising and labeling overtly to attract kids didn’t stop kids’ demand
for and access to vaping products; (2) strategies like age-gating web-
sites and monitoring retailers’ sales also didn’t cease the youth-vap-
ing problem because kids get their vaping products from older
friends and through their social networks (not through buying
them online or at a store), anyway; and (3) it was primarily the fla-
voring itself in the vaping products that attracted kids. In the FDA’s
own words from its 2020 Guidance “age verification,” “focusing on
how the product [is] sold, . . . legal prohibitions, and . . . voluntary
actions by some manufacturers” are just “not sufficient to address
youth use of these products, given the many sources of products
available for youth access.” 2020 Guidance at 44-45 (emphasis
added). It’s hard to imagine the FDA could have been any clearer.

All these things will still be true on remand. And as I’ve dis-
cussed, nothing in the Companies’ petitions neutralizes or mean-
ingfully otherwise addresses these problems. So the FDA’s conclu-
sions about the source of the youth vaping problem and the ineffi-

cacy of marketing and sales-access-restriction plans in resolving this
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 23

problem necessarily require the FDA to deny the Companies’ mar-
keting applications, as currently composed, on remand. When, as
here, “only one conclusion [by the agency] would be supportable,”
we have recognized that remand is futile. Schwarzbaum, 24 F.4th
at 1367. And when the FDA does what we know it will—indeed,
must—do, the Companies will be back here again on appeal, and

we will have no choice but to deny their petitions then.

Put simply, the FDA’s analysis of the problem up through its
denial of the Companies’ applications—an analysis that is entirely
unaffected by anything in the Companies’ marketing and access-
restriction plans!4—leaves no doubt that remand is an exercise in
futility. And it’s not because the FDA has supposedly changed its
analysis or because I have allegedly made factual findings. Rather,
remand is futile because of the FDA’s analysis of the problem of
kids’ use of flavored vaping products and because of the FDA’s

 

14 To illustrate just how little effect the marketing plans will have on FDA’s
analysis on remand, I’ve attached as an appendix two of the “plans” that FDA
will now have to review. One is Union Street’s “Youth Prevention Policy,” a
five-page document that suggests youth-prevention strategies such as
“check[ing] for proof of age for any customer who is attempting to purchase
vapor products.” The other is Pop Vapor’s “Marketing Plan,” which, in all of
four pages, states its position that its “products should only be sold to, and
used by, adults age 21 and older.” It’s not that these statements take a position
contrary to the FDA’s view that vaping products are dangerous for kids. But
these “marketing plans” aren’t exactly groundbreaking. And on this record,
it’s clear that they aren’t capable of changing FDA’s mind about the dangers
of youth use of and access to vaping products.
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24 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

findings of fact about the inefficacy of marketing plans and sales-
access restrictions, and its related findings of fact about where kids

get their products from.

So it’s wrong to describe my analysis as “fact[-]find[ing]’ or
some type of “moral judgment.” Maj. Op. at 30, 29. Rather, my
analysis is a straight-forward application of the administrative rec-
ord here. And that administrative record belies all the mischarac-

terizations of this dissent that the Majority Opinion engages in.

I am also not the first to conclude that remand of applica-
tions for flavored vaping products is futile. Both the Fifth and the
District of Columbia Circuits have likewise held that remand to the
FDA under circumstances like these is not appropriate under the
Administrative Procedure Act’s harmless-error provision. See
Wages & White Lion Invs., L.L.C. v. FDA, ___ F.4th ___, No. 21-
60766, 2022 WL, 2799797, *11 (5th Cir. July 18, 2022); Prohibition
Juice Co. v. FDA, ___ F.4th ___, No. 21-1201, 2022 WL 2920823,
*12-14 (D.C. Cir. July 26, 2022); see also id. at 15 (Katsas, J., concur-

ring). For good reason.

We should not engage in what we all know will be an exer-
cise in futility. On this record, the Majority Opinion’s decision to
remand when it’s clear that the FDA’s decisional framework re-
quires denial of the Companies’ applications unnecessarily clogs
the administrative process and increases the costs to all concerned.

I respectfully dissent.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 60 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 25

APPENDIX

Union Street Brands
Youth Prevention Policy
Page iof5

Youth Prevention Policy for Union Street Brands LLC

Union Street is committed to doing our part in preventing underage use of ENDS
products in our local and worldwide communities. As this Youth Prevention Policy will
demonstrate, we have implemented thorough methods of preventing youth access to
Union Street's e-liquid products.

I. Vapor Sales Policy and Procedure

Union Street has spent a significant amount of time and resources to ensure that
the company is doing everything it can to prevent youth access to our products.
Union Street prohibits entry of minors into our locations. We require ID
verification for all purchases. All employees undergo thorough training on our
age verification procedures.

Each employee has a moral, ethical and legal responsibility to refuse to sell vapor
products to anyone under the age of 21. Vapor products must not be sold to
anyone under the age of 21. We require all employees to check for proof of age
for any customer who is attempting to purchase vapor products.

a. Verify the customer’s age before selling vapor products.

The customer must have an acceptable and valid Driver’s License, Non
Driver ID, or Commercial Driver’s License to purchase tobacco products.
All wholesale customers must provide valid identification including but
not limited to photo identification and tax identification documentation.

b. Other points

It is illegal for a minor to purchase vapor products for anyone for any
reason. A minor may not purchase these products for a parent. It is illegal
for an adult to purchase these products for a minor. Never sell vapor
products to anyone if you have reason to believe they are going to give
them to someone under the age of 21. Remember, no one under 21 may
possess vapor products of any kind.
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26

ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

ce. Training
Upon beginning employment, all employees will receive training to ensure

that they understand all state laws and company policies regarding the
prohibition against selling tobacco products to minors.

A7474

Union Street Brands
Youth Prevention Policy
Page 2 of 5

II.

Online E-Commerce Age-Restrictions

Online sales are restricted to adults following age verification through
independent, third-party agencies using public records databases. Union Street
e-commerce platform (www.mamaseliquid.com) utilizes third-party age
verification technology through AgeChecker.net.

a. Age Restriction. Company product sales must comply with all county, city,
and state age restriction laws for e-vapor product purchase.

b. Age Verification. Online company product sales are restricted to adults age
verified by independent third-party companies using public records
databases.

c. Attempt to match the name, address and date of birth provided by the
customer to information contained in records in a database of individuals
whose age has been verified to be 21 years or older by reference to an
appropriate database of government records kept by the distributor, a
direct marketing firm, or any other entity.

d. Verify that the billing address on the check or credit card offered for
payment by the purchaser matches the address listed in the database.
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 27

e. If unable to verify that the purchaser is 21 years of age through the above,
require the customer or recipient to submit an age-verification kit
consisting of an attestation signed by the customer that he or she is 21
years of age or older and a copy of a valid form of government
identification.

f. Verify that the billing address on the check or credit card provided by the
consumer matches the address listed in the form of government
identification.

g. Deliver only to the purchaser or recipient’s verified billing address on the

check or credit card used for payment. Delivery to a post office box address
is prohibited.

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Union Street Brands
Youth Prevention Policy
Page 3of5

Ill. Child Resistant Packaging

 

Union Street's open-system e-liquid products will use child resistant packaging in
compliance with the Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act of 2015. Union
Street Utilizes the following Child Resistant Packaging:

Package Types:

30ml - Glass Dropper Bottle with child resistant 20/400 cap-closure and tamper evident seal. The
30ml Bottle 20/400 Closure fulfills the requirements for a Poison Prevention Package as per the
current Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.) Title 16, Part 1700.20.

60ml - Chubby Gorilla CGUB1-60MLV3 PET plastic bottles with Child Resistant Cap (CRC)
child resistant cap and tamper evident seal/bands. Include flow restriction tips.

CGUB1-60MLV3 models were tested using the PPPA standards and they meet effectiveness
specifications (16 CFR 1700.15(b)) when tested by 16 CFR1700.20 methods. These models were
also tested using the Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act (CNPPA) protocols set forth by
CPSC and all meet the requirements for nicotine flow restriction.
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28 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

IV. Appropriate Marketing and Packaging

ht. As a member of the Vapor Technology Association (VTA), Smoke Free
Alternatives Trade Association (SFATA), and Florida Smoke Free Association
(FSFA), we adhere to their strict marketing guidelines. VTA Marketing
Standards for Membership are based on the following core principles:

a. VTAis committed to educating and informing its members on the best
ways to comply with applicable laws and regulations governing electronic
cigarettes, vaporizers and related electronic nicotine delivery systems
(“Vapor Products”), which laws include, but are not limited to, the Federal
Food Drug & Cosmetic Act (21 USC Ch. 9 et seq.) as modified by the
Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act and 21 CFR Parts
1100, 1140 and 1143 (Deeming Tobacco Products To Be Subject to
the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, May 10, 2016) (the “Tobacco
Control Act”)and the Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act of 2015, 15
U.S.C. §§ 1471, et seq.

b. Vapor Products are for adults only and should not be intentionally
marketed to, sold to or used by those who have not attained the age of 21
years (or the appropriate age restriction within the subject territory)
(“Minors”).

A7476

 

Union Street Brands
Youth Prevention Policy
Page 4 of 5

 

c. VIA Members’ marketing activities must refrain from knowingly
marketing Vapor Products to Minors, which is strictly prohibited.

2. Our social media accounts are age restricted to 21+, meaning that no one
under the age of 21 can view them.

3. Our website utilizes an age gate which requires users to confirm they are of
legal vaping age (21+) before viewing the site.

4. Our packaging is never labeled in a way that is misleading or resembles
copyright protected or kid-friendly food products.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 64 of 70

21-13340

~

10.

11.

ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 29

Our vapor products do not include content which is directed towards Minors.

Our marketing of vapor products is not directed at Minors and no channel of
marketing is employed if more than 15% of its audience is Minors. This
restriction includes, but is not necessarily limited to, TV, print and radio
advertising, as well as event marketing or sponsorships. Our advertising is
limited to radio stations whose target market is age 25 and up. (Note: Union
Street does not utilize TV, print, or radio advertising.)

. Our vapor products do not use in commerce names, imagery or designs that

intentionally mimic, play upon, invoke or otherwise infringe upon existing
trademarks, trade names or trade dress, particularly if they are associated
with products that are or were primarily marketed to Minors.

. Our vapor products are not portrayed as any sort of smoking cessation device

or as a product which may be used to help quit smoking.

Our vapor products are not marketed as providing a therapeutic value, as
being safe or healthy for consumers, or as products which do not produce
secondhand health effects.

Our vapor products are not marketed or sold using modified risk descriptors
or claims (e.g., “light,” “low,” and/or “mild”). Our vapor products are not
marketed as (a) having no ash or smoke, (b) having no tar, (c) being less
harmful, (d) posing a lower risk of disease or (e) as containing reduced or zero
levels of harmful ingredients.

We accurately represent the ingredients contained in our Vapor Products and,

in particular, the ingredients contained in any e-liquid. We do not deceive the
consumer regarding the contents of our vapor products.

A7477

Union Street Brands
Youth Prevention Policy

Page 5 0f5

12. We ensure that all product sampling is restricted to adults and follow all

applicable laws.

13. We do not use health professionals to market or otherwise endorse our vapor

products, directly or indirectly.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 65 of 70

30

ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

14. Our marketing is directed towards those who are current users of tobacco
products and are never designed to encourage non-tobacco users to start
using Vapor Products.

Conclusion

Union Street’s goal in its efforts is to provide adult consumers who would
otherwise be smoking combustible cigarettes with an alternative source of
nicotine, while preventing minors from accessing vapor products. To that end,
Union Street has implemented robust youth prevention methods for its
operations including preventing entry of minors into its manufacturing location,
and third party age-verification technology.

Union Street's consumer survey data demonstrates that the company’s
safeguards and stringent age-verification protocols have made the company
successful in its mission of providing quality products to an older adult consumer
base of former combustible tobacco smokers. Furthermore, Union Street's
consumer demographic and age data shows that this Youth Prevention Policy is
successful in its effort to prevent underage use of Union Street's products.

A7478
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21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 31

[Pop Vapor Marketing Plan]
Marketing Plan

Our company is committed to responsible labeling, advertising, marketing, promotion and honest
consumer-directed activities. The goal of our marketing initiative includes alignment of our
product with federal, state, and local standards. Our strategic plan encompasses the following
core values and principles:

1) Our company only markets and sells our products to legal adult tobacco product users.

2) Our company is honest about our products, including providing information on potential
health risks.

3) Our company respects the law and views compliance with the law as a minimum standard
that we must constantly meet and exceed.

4) Our company follows a strict standardized ethical code, with some local adaptation

Market Program

After receiving premarket submission clearance from the FDA, our company proposes to
implement a strategic approach to our marketing plan. The purpose for advertising and
promoting our product is to (a) provide information to tobacco consumers regarding product
choice, (b) capture brand share from competitors, and (c) promote brand awareness.

Target Market

Our intended target audience for our marketing is adult smokers over the age of 21. Specific
demographic characteristics for focus include individuals aged 25-44 years old, and current
smokers who are interested in smoking cessation.

Advertising and Media Outreach

Planned Media and PR Distribution Channels

* Qur marketing tactics include the use of US-based social media channels (Instagram,
Facebook), magazine advertisements, and radio announcements. All media channels will
include statements that our products are intended for ADULT USE only.

e We do not use knowingly use earned media to promote our products.

e We grow our brand organically with quality products and superior customer service.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 67 of 70

32 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

Partnerships and Sponsors
e We do engage with partners and influencer marketing to advertise and promote our

products. Our influencers regularly reinforce the use of our products as an ADULT USE,
21+ product.

JA308

 

Global Media Channels/Affiliates

® We maintain relationships we have with our wholesalers, distributors, and industry
affiliates.

Marketing Budget

e We have not dedicated a budget for media buys, marketing, and promotional activities.

Marketing Timeline
® We do not have a specific marketing timeline for our marketing activities

® Our marketing timeline consists of consistent consumer engagement via social media
posts

Consumer Engagements/Sampling

e We do not have plans to participate in consumer engagements, including events at
specific direct-to-consumer tradeshows only

Product Samples

e Our company is not engaging in end user promotion with sampling.

e Our company only provides product sampling, in limited quantities, to verified businesses
who responsibly sell tobacco products through adult only saleschannels.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 68 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 33

Company Marketing Standards

Our company recognizes our responsibility to provide conscientious communication to consumers
and the public. As part of a sound ongoing marketing campaign, we have implemented specific
rules and principles to guide our PR, advertising and promotional efforts.

Quality Content Standard

* Our company will employ carefully curated processes to provide relevant, credible, and
diligent content.

* Our company prohibits the use of imagery or design that might perceived as violation or
infringement of trademark and/or trade dress.

Accurate and Non-Misleading standard

* Our marketing campaign will ensure that our brand and specific content conveys an
accurate and non-misleading impression of the promoted product.
« All statements and content will comply avijh gpplicable laws.

 

* Our marketing campaign will include clear messaging detailing, including the risks
associated with our product

* Ourcompany will refrain from misleading and/or unauthorized claims about our products.
All claims including customer reviews, social media posts, testimonials, and marketing
made on any forum will always be substantiated, credible, authentic, and backed by
reputable sources.

e Our company does not make any disease, health, safety, or modified risk claims about our
products.

¢ Our company does not make smoking cessation claims about our products.

Labeling and Product Warnings Standard
* Qur company is dedicated to diligent labeling that is not false or misleading.

* Our product will bear its established name prominently, adequate directions for use, and
adequate warnings that are necessary for the protection of users
USCA11 Case: 21-13340 Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 69 of 70

34 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 21-13340

Our product warnings include:

 

* FDA Nicotine Warning Statement: “WARNING: This product contains nicotine. Nicotine is
an addictive chemical.”

e California Proposition 65: a WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals
including formaldehyde, which is known to the State of California to cause cancer, and
nicotine, which is known to the State of California to cause birth defects or other
reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.PG5Warnings.ca.gov.

« “WARNING: Contains nicotine, which can be poisonous. Avoid contact with skin and eyes.
Do not drink. Keep out of reach of children and pets. In case of accidental contact, seek
medical help. For use only in e-cigarettes or vaporizers by persons of legal age (at least
18). THIS IS NOT A FOOD.”

e NOT FOR SALE TO PERSONS UNDER LEGAL SMOKING AGE.

* KEEP AWAY FROM CHILDREN AND PETS.

 

 

 

Preventing Youth Access and Appeal Standard

* Qur products should only be sold to, and used by, adults age 21 and older.

* To prevent the sale and distribution of our products to young people and ensure
appropriate marketing for the protection of the public health, we have adopted the
following policies and practices:

© Our company complies with the local, state, and federal age restrictions

© Our company’s online sales are restricted to adults only following age verification
through independent, third-party agencies using public records databases.

© Our company educates and supports our distributors, wholesalers, and retailers to
ensure that they have appropriate systems in place for age verification for in-
person and online sales.

JA310

 

© Our company PR and marketing campaign will comply with all applicable
promotion and advertising restrictions, with an emphasis on reducing exposure of
our promotional content to children and adolescents.
USCA11 Case: 21-13340

Date Filed: 08/23/2022 Page: 70 of 70

21-13340 ROSENBAUM, J., Dissenting 35

> Our company PR and marketing campaign will comply with all applicable

promotion and advertising restrictions, with an emphasis on reducing exposure of
our promotional content to children and adolescents.

" To further these efforts to limit access and reduce youth interest in our

product, we have taken the additional following steps:

Converted to using only a plain black and white label and external
packaging to minimize the visual appeal of our products
Prohibited the use of youth appealing content for product naming
and labeling. Our company will not use images or names such as
candy, candy flavors or other child/teen content and imagery.
Emphasized the barring of underage sales in our marketing and
promotion strategy
Restricted social media marketing and ensure all content intended
for the US market is age-restricted

Limiting social media marketing to only utilizing age-

appropriate influencers to promote our brand

Excluded the use of images/pictures appealing to youth
Limited our sales channels to online retail sites with adequate
online age verification software

Overall, our company is committed to responsible marketing and industry-leading consumer

engagement. We will continue to comply and collaborate with federal and state agencies in
order to ensure the communication of our products is appropriate for the protection of public

health.

JA311