Pubdate: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2002 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Shelly Whitehead, Post staff reporter POLICE: KHAT DRUG SCENE'S NEW PLAYER The chewy leaves and buds of an East African shrub called khat are attracting growing attention locally from drug treatment and enforcement officials, who hope it doesn't take root as a street drug here. Ohio officials issued an alert Wednesday and the Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force is sending information to police in its jurisdiction about the plant known formally as Catha edulis Forsk, and casually as khat, qat, Abyssinian tea and African salad. In fact, "salad" is precisely how a motorist stopped on Interstate 75 recently with what was thought to be khat described his cargo to police. "This was a person the officer had stopped for a traffic violation and then for some reason he came across this stuff in the car," said Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force Director Jim Paine. "The occupants told him it was 'salad' that was purchased at a specialty store geared toward people from African nations. That was the first time that any has been seen in this area." The substance is so new to this area, Paine said, that the officer only later learned that it was probably khat, an illegal Schedule I narcotic in this country. Khat can make users feel happy, chatty and energetic. But the biggest obstacle to it becoming the latest recreational drug of choice is its short shelf-life. Cincinnati Drug and Poison Information Center Co-director Dr. Earl Siegel said cathinone, the most powerful "feel-good" chemical in khat, rarely survives the trip from shrub in East Africa to chew in Cincinnati. "If it's preserved, at best it's going to last 48 hours," Siegel said. "So if there are people waiting at the airport for it, maybe. But really it's not going to be a major street drug here. - It just loses potency so quickly." Paine said the traffic stop incident highlighted a need for dissemination of information about khat locally, which the strike force has begun to do. Likewise, the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addictions Services issued an "early warning alert" Wednesday to educate school and drug treatment and enforcement officials about khat. Khat is popular and legal in the East African countries like Somalia where it grows. A flood of Somalis into Columbus recently has been accompanied by a flood of khat, say officials, adding that many East African users are unaware the plant is illegal here. "The drug has increasingly entered the U.S. by these emerging cultural enclaves," the Ohio early warning alert stated. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl