Pubdate: Thu, 12 Aug 2010 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2010 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www2.indystar.com/help/letters.html Website: http://www.indystar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Mary Beth Schneider CANDIDATES, EX-USER WANT 'SPICE' HERB ILLEGAL Derek McQueen pulled down the collar of his T-shirt, exposing two ugly scars on his neck. Those, the 21-year-old Greenfield man said, are the souvenirs of the one terrible night when he stabbed himself in a paranoid delusion sparked when he smoked "spice" -- the herb laced with synthetic chemicals that make it more powerful than marijuana. Spice is legal in Indiana, but McQueen joined a state representative Wednesday to argue that it's time for the state to join at least eight others in outlawing it. State Rep. John Barnes, an Indianapolis Democrat, said that if re-elected this November, he'll seek legislation to make synthetic marijuana illegal, along with a long list of chemical compounds used to make it. Barnes said he had not heard of spice -- which is sold as incense under brand names such as K2 -- until he read an Indianapolis Star story about it earlier this year. Barnes, a teacher at Warren Central High School, said he asked students what they knew about it. One smiled and said he knew it was legal. That, Barnes said, needs to change. "All summer long, we've had case after case of kids using this substance," he said. "Instead of it having an experience similar to marijuana, it's similar to speed. It speeds up the heartbeat. It causes palpitations, hallucinations, delusions." In some cases, he said, it's even caused death. McQueen said he doesn't smoke marijuana or cigarettes. But about four months ago, when a friend suggested he try spice, he did. "In about 15 minutes, I was just on fire," he said. "I just wanted it to stop. I was paranoid. Didn't know what to do, so I ran to the kitchen, grabbed a sharp object and tried to end it all." His mother, Annette Emge, said she heard her son yelling, "Make it stop." She found him bleeding on the floor. If she hadn't have been home, she said, he would have died. When she learned the substance he'd smoked was legal, Emge said, she felt "outrage." "It needs to be banned so no other parent has to go through what I went through." Indiana has the largest number of reported cases involving spice in the United States, according to Julie Saetre, a spokeswoman with Drug-Free Marion County. As of June 30, 41 cases involving youths 6 to 19 with adverse effects from spice were reported to the Indiana Poison Center. An additional 25 cases involved adults older than 19. "As it gets more attention, it is still legal, and people want to try it out. . . . They want to experiment, they think it's legal and so they say, 'Why not?' " Saetre said. Barnes and Democratic legislative candidate John Voorhies, who joined him at the news conference, said that until it is banned, they will encourage retailers not to sell spice. Standing near a Marathon gas station where he'd just purchased K2, Barnes noted they were only a few blocks from Beech Grove High School. While spice is marketed as incense, he said, it was sold alongside cigarette papers. "If this is incense that's not for human consumption, and you're selling it with rolling papers right under it, that's what we call a wink and a nod," Barnes said. Raj Choudhari, manager of the gas station, said he won't voluntarily take the product from his shelves. It's too big of a seller, he said. But, he said, if the government makes it illegal, "we'll just quit selling it." Barnes said the only opposition he knows of to making spice illegal comes from those making money from selling it. But Chris Spangle, executive director of the Libertarian Party in Indiana, questioned the wisdom of creating another drug crime. "After 40 years, the war on drugs has been a miserable failure," he said, saying it merely fills up prisons without changing behavior. Still, T.J. Thompson, a Libertarian candidate for Congress, said he'd support making spice illegal. Thompson said he sells it in the two Check Masters stores his family owns in Franklin and Shelbyville. He'd voluntarily stop, he said, "if it is pinned down that this stuff is causing these effects." And, he said, he'd support banning it "as long as they do it in a purely legal and constitutional way" with a "legitimate base and reasoning behind it." Cindy Kirchhofer, the Republican running against Barnes for the House District 89 seat, said she supported making spice illegal. But, she said, "I don't think it's a top priority right now. I think education and how we are going to make a budget work in 2011 is much more important." Republican state Rep. Phil Hinkle, whom Voorhies is challenging for the House District 92 seat, could not be reached for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt