Pubdate: Sun, 27 Mar 2011 Source: Standard-Speaker (Hazleton, PA) Copyright: 2011 The Standard-Speaker Contact: http://www.standardspeaker.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1085 Author: Robert Swift Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/bath+salts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/bath+salts STATE BILLS WOULD BAN BATH SALTS HARRISBURG - With new types of dangerous synthetic drugs quickly appearing on the market, state lawmakers and law enforcement officials face a challenge to keep legislation banning their sale up to date. The House plans a final vote the week of April 4 on a bill to ban the sale of "bath salts," which mimic the effects of cocaine and methamphetamine, as well as other synthetic narcotics. This bill is a conglomeration of proposals to add various synthetic narcotics sold in different parts of the state to the list of controlled substances. Once approved, this bill would go to the Senate, which has bills of its own. The House measure started out in January as a ban on salvia divinorum, a hallucinogenic herb mixture. It has been amended to include bath salts, synthetic marijuana and a synthetic cocaine known as "blizzard." The Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association is specifically calling for action this session to make bath salts and K2/Spice, a chemically treated herb mixture, illegal. The drafters of these bills use devices to put bans in place that are comprehensive enough and necessarily adaptive to withstand the efforts of synthetic drug makers to circumvent them. "It's sometimes a cat-and-mouse game," said Richard Long, executive director of the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association. The House bill contains a list of chemical compounds used in the manufacture of synthetics that would be banned. One is 3.4-methlylenedoxpyrovaleone, or MDPV, used to make bath salts. The list is developed by talking with scientists to find out what compounds are being used and what potential variations could be adapted, Long said. Banning a chemical compound is more effective than simply listing a trade name, said Bob Caton, spokesman for Rep. Jennifer Mann, D-132, Allentown, who introduced a bill last session to ban synthetic marijuana. "We go after the stuff that goes into making it," Caton said. In an indication of how quickly synthetic drug use evolves, the emergence of bath salts - which can induce strong paranoia and delusion - only came after Mann's bill was introduced, he said. The official list of controlled substances already includes peyote, mescaline, and lysergic acid diethylamide or LSD, the counter-culture "trip drug" of the 1960s. Sen. Lisa Baker, R-20, Lehman Township, raised the issue of banning bath salts last week as top state law enforcement officials appeared at Senate budget hearings. State Police Commissioner-designate Frank Noonan said a ban is needed. "It is necessary right now," he said while warning that new synthetics would eventually appear on the scene. Sen. Lisa Boscola, D-18, Lehigh County, has sponsored a bill to ban salvia and synthetic marijuana. Sen. Larry Farnese, D-1, Philadelphia, is drafting a bill to ban bath salts. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake