Direct Shipping Timeline
Dana Nigro
Posted: Monday, May 16, 2005
- 1919: States ratify 18th Amendment, outlawing manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages
- 1920: Prohibition takes effect
- 1933: Congress passes 21st Amendment, repealing Prohibition
- 1985: California becomes first reciprocal
shipping state
- 1996: Kentucky becomes first state to pass law making it a felony to ship wine directly to consumers; group of California vintners boycotts the state
- 1997: Felony laws take effect in Florida, Georgia and North Carolina
October 1997: Louisiana becomes first state to allow "limited direct shipping"; law requires shippers to get a license and pay taxes
- July 1998: New Hampshire becomes the first "control state" to legalize shipping
directly to consumers
- August 1998: Indiana passes a felony
shipping law; 13 Indiana residents file first consumer lawsuit challenging a state's ban
- April 1999: Texas wine-lovers file second federal lawsuit to challenge state's
shipping ban
- June 1999: Maryland becomes a felony state
- December 1999: U.S. District Court judge
overturns Indiana's shipping ban
- February 2000: U.S. District Court judge rules Texas' ban is unconstitutional
- May 2000: Georgia governor signs bill
allowing limited shipping, but retaining felony penalties
- September 2000: U.S. Court of Appeals
reverses Indiana decision, upholds state's shipping ban
- October 2000: U.S. Congress passes 21st Amendment Enforcement Act, giving states more power to prosecute illegal shippers from out-of-state; President Clinton signs it
- 2001: U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear Indiana case; U.S. District Court judges dismiss lawsuit in Florida, uphold Michigan's shipping ban
- April 2002: U.S. District Court judges
overturn shipping bans in Virginia and North Carolina
- July 2002: U.S. District Court judge rules
that Texas' new shipping laws are
unconstitutional
- December 2002: Federal judge rules that New York can't enforce its interstate wine-shipping ban
- March 2003: Kenneth Starr joins direct-shipping fight
- June 2003: South Carolina allows wine shipments to consumers
- July 2003: North Carolina allows direct shiping of wine
- July 2003: Hawaii expands wine shipping
- August 2003: Appeals court nixes Michigan's wine-shipping ban
- February 2004: Appeals court upholds New York's wine-shipping ban
- December 2004: Supreme Court hears direct-shipping case
- April 2005: Texas legislature passes bill allowing wineries to ship to consumers
- May 2005: Supreme Court overturns wine-shipping bans
Currently on Wine Spectator Online:
- Wine Talk: K.D. Lang
This Canadian chanteuse indulges her love of wine and food through world travel - Tasting Highlights: California Rhône
Nine exceptional new Syrahs and Grenaches from Santa Barbara and Paso Robles - Unfiltered: Napa's Copia Shuts Its Doors, for Now at Least
Plus: Drinking wine to feed hungry children and an Elvis sighting in Paso Robles - Health Research Looks to Grapes
Scientists hope to unlock the potential of compounds found in grapes and wine - Wine Shipping Restrictions in Massachusetts Ruled Unconstitutional
Both in- and out-of-state wineries may now ship directly to Massachusetts residents; volume caps struck down
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