Pubdate: Fri, 28 Sep 2012 Source: Sun Times, The (Owen Sound, CN ON) Copyright: 2012 Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/NtnHgLCY Website: http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1544 Author: Denis Langlois COPS APPLAUD CRIMINALIZING 'BATH SALTS' Health Canada has now made illegal the key ingredient in the drug known as bath salts, which took Owen Sound police by surprise earlier this year after five people were hospitalized within a 24-hour period after injecting or smoking it. It's a move the city's police department is applauding. "It's positive news for us for sure. If that substance shows up again, then we'll be able to take action," Owen Sound Police Services Det-Sgt. Mark Kielb said Thursday in an interview. The drug has been found by city police only once since back-to-back raids in January, he said. A small amount was seized in May. "I believe it's out of the community. I believe it was a one-time thing," he said. Kielb said he saw firsthand what the drug, which he called "very dangerous," can do to people. "It was obvious that they were hallucinating and very paranoid," he said. Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced this week that the drug commonly found in bath salts, known as methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV), is now listed in the same category as heroin and cocaine in the Controlled Drug and Substances Act. That means police can now lay possession, trafficking and other charges after they seize MDPV. "This action gives law enforcement the authority to investigate suspected illegal activities involving MDPV, which will help keep our communities safe from this new and emerging drug," Health Canada said in a statement. Bath salts containing MDPV were found in two police raids in the city in January. Owen Sound Police Chief Bill Sornberger has said the city is believed to have been one of the first communities in Canada to experience the effects of bath salts. So named because they resemble and are often transported and trafficked as the scented bath additive of the same name, bath salts made international headlines this year after police officers in Miami speculated that a grisly cannibalistic attack on a homeless man happened after the attacker took MDPV. The drug was not found in the attacker's system. The drug had been linked to suicide and deaths in the United States and Europe before it was found in Owen Sound. Five men were seen at the city's emergency department with similar symptoms of extreme paranoia, vivid hallucinations and thoughts of suicide. Police said the substance caused people to believe they are on fire or about to be struck by lightning. Others feared someone was chasing them. Police found 14 grams of bath salts during a raid Jan. 18. Another 142 grams of powder, also suspected to be the hallucinogenic drug, were seized Jan. 23. Samples were sent to Health Canada for analysis. Sornberger said MDPV was found in the bath salts. Other drugs and prohibited weapons were found in the raids, allowing police to lay charges. However, no charges related to possession of MDPV could be laid. Kielb said if the drug had been illegal in January, police could have laid trafficking charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt