Pubdate: Thu, 26 Dec 2002 Source: Wilmington Morning Star (NC) Copyright: 2002 Wilmington Morning Star Contact: http://www.wilmingtonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500 Author: Reid J. Epstein, Knight Ridder Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Salvia 'SALVIA' PLANT SPARKS CONCERN Authorities Lean Toward Ban on Mexican Leaf MADISON, WIS. - The clerks at Knuckleheads Tobacco & Gifts, a Madison smoking accessories shop, aren't allowed to say words such as marijuana, weed or pot. Although some customers undoubtedly smoke marijuana and are drawn to the store's water pipes and rolling papers, any reference to illegal drugs could get the clerks into trouble with their boss or the police, who tend to keep a close eye on counterculture establishments. So it's difficult for them to accurately describe what it's like to smoke Salvia divinorum, a legal and increasingly popular Mexican plant that some in Congress want banned. "It's like coming down off of, you know, but without the really tired feeling you would normally get," Mike Molkentin said from behind the Knuckleheads counter. "I was able to relax and get into a different mind state." Mr. Molkentin, 20, is a music student at the Madison Media Institute. He called Salvia divinorum "a positive alternative" to smoking that illegal plant. Drug enforcement authorities would like to stop the spread of Salvia divinorum before it explodes in the United States the way Ecstasy did before it was criminalized. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration considers it one of its "drugs and chemicals of concern." And U.S. Rep Joe Baca, D-Calif., promises to reintroduce legislation in January that would make it an illegal drug. Rep. Baca introduced similar legislation in October that died in committee. In Dane County, Wis., police officers have begun to see an increased use of the dark green leaves among teenagers, who either smoke or eat the leaves. "The fact is, it's out there and kids are learning about it," said Detective George Chavez of the Dane County Narcotics and Gang Task Force. But because the government does not classify Salvia divinorum as an illegal substance, there is nothing the task force, or any other government agency, can do to regulate its use. "There's not a whole lot of enforcement we can take," Detective Chavez said. "We try to talk to as many people as we can get to. As long as you've got the information, we hope you'll make the good decisions." A plant that grows wild in Oaxaca, a state in southern Mexico, Salvia divinorum is legal everywhere in the world except for Australia, which criminalized it in June. For now, it can be purchased at shops such as Knuckleheads, which charges $4.95 a gram, and, more prominently, from stores on the Internet, where a quick Google search reveals dozens of sites dedicated to providing information in hopes of keeping Salvia legal. The Madison-based site Pure Land Ethnobotanicals sells the leaves - $25 buys 14 grams - and the more potent extract, which costs $29 per gram. A small amount of Salvia, about half a gram, is enough to produce a "clearheaded state" that is useful for meditation, said Daniel Siebert, a California man who has studied the plant for 20 years and, in the eyes of its devotees, is to Salvia divinorum what Timothy Leary was to LSD in the 1960s. Higher doses are said to produce more realistic visions in which one sees dream-like scenery. Such visions can resemble those induced by hallucinogens. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake