Pubdate: Mon, 27 Dec 2010 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: 2010 The Florida Times-Union Contact: http://www.jacksonville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/155 Author: Matt Dixon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/synthetic+marijuana BILL WOULD CRIMINALIZE THE SALE OF FAKE POT IN FLORIDA State representatives file bills to ban sales of the risky get-high product. Identical bills filed by two Jacksonville-area lawmakers would make the sale of synthetic marijuana illegal in Florida. The product is marketed as incense, and many packets are labeled as not for human consumption, but its growing popularity as a way to get high has caught the attention of lawmakers across the country. It's banned in more than a dozen states. "A friend of mine told me her daughter got into it," said state Sen. Stephen Wise, R-Jacksonville. "She said it felt like her heart was going to jump out of her chest." He and state Rep. Janet Adkins, R-Fernandina Beach, have filed identical bills in the House and Senate that would make the individual ingredients that make up the product illegal. Synthetic marijuana is sold in gas stations and smoke shops in Jacksonville. When asked about the popularity of the product, employees in those stores declined to comment. A spokesman for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement also declined comment because the department doesn't discuss proposed legislation. In November, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration said it will ban the five chemicals that make up synthetic marijuana by the end of the year, allowing it to study the product's safety. The ban will last one year. To create synthetic marijuana, the five chemicals - designed to mimic THC, the active ingredient in marijuana - are sprayed on herbs. The chemicals were concocted by John Huffman, a Clemson University researcher, to help study the relationship between the human brain and drugs like THC. In several interviews, he has stressed that they should not be used for human consumption. Wise said he is aware of the looming federal ban, but says he still wants to move forward at the state level. "Just in case they take forever at the national level," he said, "we just want to get it done here." In November, the American Association of Poison Control Centers issued a news release saying that synthetic marijuana had spurred more than 2,000 calls to poison centers across the country in 2010. "These products present a health risk that is not worth it for consumers," said Anthony J. Scalzo, the centers' medical director. "The products are meant to create a similar reaction to marijuana, but in fact, patients often report the opposite - a fast, racing heartbeat, elevated blood pressure and nausea." Wise and Adkins said they hope their bills would be signed into law before the end of the state's legislative session in the spring. "Several members already have reached out to be co-sponsors," Adkins said, "and I think we will get good bipartisan support on this." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake