| Fighting Wisconsin's Ban on Cheap Gas |
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Bhandari v. Nilsestuen
While consumers across the nation are struggling with high gas prices, Wisconsin’s state government is working to make those prices even higher by quashing competition. In 2006, small businessman Raj Bhandari purchased a gas station on the verge of bankruptcy. He quickly turned the business around, in part by offering high quality service at competitive prices. He also began building ties with the community by offering discounted gas to senior citizens and supporters of a youth sports group. Raj soon learned that, incredibly, these popular discounts could subject him to thousands of dollars in government-imposed fines. The Wisconsin Unfair Sales Act, a 1930s relic, makes it illegal to sell gasoline without marking it up either 6 percent over cost or 9.18 percent over the local wholesale price-whichever is higher. This not only stifles competition and harms consumers; it is unconstitutional. That is why on June 26, 2007, the Institute for Justice, a national public interest law firm with a history of defending economic liberty and the rights of entrepreneurs, filed suit in Dane County Circuit Court in Madison on behalf of Raj Bhandari challenging the Wisconsin Unfair Sales Act as a violation of fundamental constitutional rights.
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