Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jul 2015 Source: Washington Times (DC) Copyright: 2015 The Washington Times, LLC. Contact: http://www.washingtontimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492 Author: Andrea Noble OFFICIALS HOPE HARSH PENALTIES WILL REDUCE SELL OF SYNTHETIC POT The District's mayor has signed into law harsh new penalties for stores found selling synthetic marijuana in order to prevent an epidemic from taking hold in nation's capital the way crack cocaine once held D.C. streets hostage. The law grants Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier immediate authority to shutter businesses found selling synthetic marijuana for up to 96 hours and gives the mayor authority to fine businesses $10,000. "We don't want to go back to the crack cocaine days of what happens when people are addicted to dangerous drugs," said Chief Lanier after D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser signed the bill into law Friday. Officials declined to say how they will target stores for enforcement, but they have identified some problem businesses and seemed ready to put the new laws to the test as soon as possible. "The law goes into effect just now, a couple of minutes ago," Ms. Bowser said Friday when she was asked if police would be enforcing the new law over the weekend. A series of large-scale overdoses and possible linkage of synthetic drug use to a high-profile homicide on a Metro train have brought the issue to the forefront of concern for city residents, though law enforcement has been aware of the creeping use of the drugs for some time. The new law also has highlighted how the Metropolitan Police Department and other city agencies have been stymied in attempts to crack down on synthetic drug use in the past. Assistant Police Chief Peter Newsham said Friday that while it is illegal to possess synthetic marijuana, the department has had trouble bringing charges against individuals found selling or possessing the drugs because of an inability to quickly test the substances. "What we are running into now is the cases are being no-papered by the U.S. Attorney's office," Chief Newsham said, noting that the Drug Enforcement Administration currently tests seized substances for the police department. "But if we can establish through testing that the synthetic cannabinoids exist in what we seize then we can go back and charge them." The office of Acting U.S. Attorney Vincent Cohen issued a statement: "The formulas of the synthetic drugs are constantly being changed to stay a step ahead of law enforcement. We have worked with the District in recent years to ensure that our laws keep up with the new chemical compounds being used in these drugs. "Because the chemicals used in these drugs are constantly changing, and because there is no reliable means of testing those drugs in the field, we cannot sustain charges in these cases until laboratory testing of the compounds is completed," the U.S. Attorney's Office said in an email. "When that testing shows that the compound at issue is banned by D.C. law, we prosecute the store owners and employees who are peddling these illegal substances." The law, passed as emergency legislation by the D.C. Council, requires any business caught selling synthetic drugs to detail plans to avoid selling the drug in the future and to file those with the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs. If a business is found selling the drug a second time it can face an additional fine of $20,000 and could be shuttered for up to 30 days. The law also gives the mayor authority to keep the business closed until the assessed fines are paid. Officials stressed the dangers that the drugs pose, not only to users who often become disoriented, but to others around them as users have also been known to become violent when under the influence. "Profits can't come before lives," Chief Lanier said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom