Pubdate: Mon, 23 May 2011 Source: Green Bay Press-Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2011 Green Bay Press-Gazette Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/RINfDfZ0 Website: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/879 Author: Charles Davis SYNTHETIC MARIJUANA TARGETED IN GREEN BAY 5 Shops Found Selling Products Made With Banned Chemicals Authorities seized $160,000 worth of apparent synthetic marijuana from a store following an investigation launched when two Green Bay East High School freshmen who smoked some of it were rushed to the hospital last month. Police seized the suspected fake pot, also known as K2, on April 15 from Northern Lights Smoke Shop, 322 N. Baird St., Green Bay, according to a search warrant filed in Brown County Circuit Court. The store, located about three blocks from the high school, has since closed. The owner, Christopher Andrews, declined comment. The search warrant says police are investigating four other stores suspected of selling K2. Six chemicals commonly found in the drug have been banned by city ordinance as of December. The two students were hospitalized April 12 after allegedly smoking a product called Dave's Not Here just before school began, police said. One of the boys began to convulse, and the other was found unconscious outside on school property. Both were treated at St. Vincent Hospital and released. According to the search warrant, a lab was set up in the basement of the shop, where several plants were drying in tin roasting pans. Each tin was labeled with the ingredients used for making the product. Officers also reported a digital scale with green plant material on it. Products seized from all five shops were sent to the State Crime Lab in Wausau, where they were identified as synthetic marijuana. However, the products did not include any chemicals banned by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration or the city ordinance. The broader city ordinance also bans drugs that produce the same effect as marijuana. Authorities plan to test the seized products to see if they produce the same effect as marijuana, said Green Bay police Lt. Bill Bongle, who declined to say how police would do that. "There are so many varieties, and some of them deviate by maybe a couple molecules, chemically, so the people that produce this stuff are constantly trying to change the formula to stay ahead of the law," he said. Dissecting the drug Synthetic marijuana is made by spraying a chemical on legal dried herbs or plants. "What people don't know when they smoke this stuff is what chemicals it contains," Bongle said. The product often smells like potpourri, not pot, and looks similar to oregano seasoning, he said. "They're telling people that it's incense and not for human consumption. Yet it's packaged and sold with items used to smoke." Shops that carry it usually have signs prohibiting anyone younger than 18 from entering the store, and the product often is stored under the counter. Synthetic marijuana locally can cost up to $40 a gram, just $10 a gram cheaper than high-grade marijuana, Bongle said. "Nobody goes in a store to pay $40 for 1 gram of incense when there's some incense in the same store that's only 6 bucks. Clearly, there's something going on here." Green Bay investigators are awaiting state Crime Lab results of tests on other products seized from the stores this month. The DEA announced in March the ban of five common chemicals found in synthetic marijuana for at least a year while authorities investigate their effects. The chemicals could be banned permanently. At least 16 states have acted to ban one or more common chemicals used to make synthetic marijuana, which is often sold as incense or potpourri, according to the DEA. A bill moving through the Wisconsin Legislature seeks to outlaw several chemicals found in synthetic marijuana. A second offense for possession would be a felony with a fine up to $10,000 and up to 3= years in prison. The sale or possession of synthetic marijuana is banned in Ashwaubenon, Bellevue, Howard, Suamico and Wrightstown. Safety concerns Green Bay police began seeing more use of synthetic marijuana last fall because it was legal, Bongle said. Users favor the synthetic product because it doesn't show up in drug tests, said Jocko Zifferblatt, emergency physician at St. Vincent and St. Mary's hospitals. Zifferblatt said he has treated several young people in the past two months for psychotic delusions and high heart rates brought on by smoking synthetic marijuana. "It's not the same as marijuana," he said. "It's clearly much more addictive. It lasts longer in your system. And it's unpredictable." No studies exist to show how the chemicals affect people, he said. To stay a step ahead of the law, manufacturers often change the chemicals, which means smokers don't know what they are taking. "You may have a fine trip the first time. You may have a terrible trip the next time," Zifferblatt said. Green Bay East High School Principal Ed Dorff said the school district's drug policy calls for discipline up to expulsion for violators. He said that policy was followed for the two freshmen hospitalized last month, but he declined to say how. A letter was sent to middle and high school parents alerting them of that incident, said Barbara Dorff, executive director of learning and student services for the Green Bay School District. "We really would like parents to be aware of it and be looking for it," she said of synthetic marijuana. "It's very expensive, so if your children are bringing home potpourri that costs $15 in a very tiny package, that would be very suspicious." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.