Synthetic Drugs - Ohio Crime Prevention Association
Transcription
Synthetic Drugs - Ohio Crime Prevention Association
Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs SYNTHETIC DRUGS Synthetic Cannabinoids, Synthetic Cathinones Dangerous to Users, Cops ropical Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and mountainous Wise County, Va. are as different as two places in the U.S. could be, but unfortunately they do have at least one thing in common — growing abuse of illegal synthetic drugs that has local law enforcement alarmed. Although the list of all synthetic drugs is lengthy, two relatively new categories of drugs are grabbing the headlines — synthetic marijuana (cannabinoids) such as Spice and K2, and synthetic stimulants (cathinones) such as bath salts and alpha-PVP, known on the street as flakka or gravel. This year, an epidemic of overdose hospitalizations has swept across the Southeast and other regions of the U.S. due to Spice or fake marijuana, while certain areas, specifically South Florida, are seeing bizarre behaviors exhibited by flakka (gravel) abusers. A longtime law enforcement veteran, Lt. Richard Stallard said he’s never seen drugs overtake communities “as quickly and as viciously” as the new synthetics. “I’ve been in law enforcement for 28 years (23 with the Southwest Virginia Drug Task Force), and I’ve seen every drug there is, and I’ve yet to see a drug with the addiction potential of these synthetics.” By ROCIC Publications, ROCIC © 2015 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 1 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Diverted pharmaceuticals and marijuana are still the most abused drugs in southwestern Virginia, but fake marijuana and bath salts (gravel) are next in line. “These drugs are very damaging; they have engulfed entire communities,” he stated, adding that eight out of every ten drug dealers in his jurisdiction are selling synthetics (among other drugs). Wise County has seen an overdose death and a sexual assault due to bath salts, said Lt. Larry Mullins of the sheriff’s office. “These synthetic drugs have had a devastating effect on the community. We have had multiple overdoses since 2011. We have had several murders and robberies involving synthetic drugs.” Flakka Trending in South Florida Flakka or gravel has been labeled the “second generation of bath salts.” In southern Florida, concern over flakka (as gravel is known locally) has taken hold. Users of flakka have exhibited bizarre and dangerous behavior, often endangering police and first responders. In March 2014, a young partygoer at a Miami-area music festival died from an overdose of gravel, most likely taken unknowingly. On Jan. 30, 2015, a naked man on an apartment building rooftop in Miami shot a round from a pistol and then tried unsuccessfully to shoot himself in the head. He said he felt delusional and was hallucinating. On Feb. 9, a homeless man claiming to be chased by cars tried in vain to kick open the front doors of the Fort Lauderdale Police Department and then cracked the glass by throwing several rocks. In March, five police officers in Miami were required to restrain a man who ripped off his clothes and ran out of his house screaming and hallucinating. On March 22, a man being chased by “demons” tried “Not For Human Consumption” The only accurate information on the label. to jump the security fence around the Fort Lauderdale police station and impaled himself through the thigh on a spike. Rescue crews had to cut away part of the fence before the victim was rushed to surgery with part of the spike still in his leg. On April 4, a man wearing only sneakers ran amuck through Fort Lauderdale traffic trying to get struck by a car because he was being chased by German Shepherd dogs. He said he had ripped off his clothes because his body temperature got so hot. On April 10, a man claiming to be the god Thor ran naked through a Melbourne neighborhood, tried to have sex with a tree, and then assaulted a police officer with his own badge after being Tasered twice unsuccessfully (he pulled out the probes). On May 9, Melbourne police arrested a 17-year-old girl after she jumped through a window in a home, South Florida Flakka Users in the News DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 2 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Flakka User Trying to Kick Open Front Entrance of Fort Lauderdale Police Department assaulted one of the residents, and then ran outside covered in blood and broken glass screaming, “I am God, I am Satan!” She was Tasered and taken into custody. “Once they start on synthetics they don’t want any other drug.” — Lt. Richard Stallard, Southwest Virginia Drug Task Force Paranoia and excited delirium “On a scale of one to 10, flakka is a 12,” said Lt. Dan Zsido of the Pinellas County, Fla. Sheriff’s Office in a news account. “It comes from a place where we don’t know how it’s being made, who’s making it, and what’s been added to it before it reaches the end user, so it’s very dangerous.” Jim Hall, an epidemiologist at the Center for Applied Research on Substance Use (NOVA Southeastern University in Miami), explained to Medical Daily: “We’re starting to see a rash of cases of a syndrome referred to as excited delirium. This is where the body goes into hyperthermia, generally a temperature of 105 degrees. The individual becomes psychotic. They often rip off their clothes and run out into the street violently and have an adrenaline-like strength, and police are called and it takes four or five officers to restrain them. Once they are restrained, if they don’t receive immediate medical attention they can die.” “I’ve had one addict describe it as $5 insanity,” said Don Maines, a drug treatment counselor with the Broward Sheriff’s Office in Fort Lauderdale. “They still want to try it because it’s so cheap. It gives them heightened awareness. They feel stronger and more sensitive to touch. But then the paranoia sets in.” Paranoia is one of the most common symptoms of gravel usage, said Lt. Stallard. “They all think they need a gun.” He said one incident in southwest Virginia involved a drug deal which resulted in hostages held at gunpoint in a motel room. Incidents are not restricted to Florida. An Australian truck driver on the drug allegedly tore off his clothes, began foaming at the mouth, and climbed a barbedwire fence before falling into a coma and dying. Other alpha-PVP users have allegedly climbed trees and rolled around in the grass like animals, and a Missouri man high on the drug is accused of fatally shooting his 20-year-old son. Law enforcement agencies in Sacramento, Calif., Upstate New York, and Massachusetts have not noticed any evidence of gravel in their jurisdictions. DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 3 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs alpha-PVP. Alpha-PVP is chemically similar to other synthetic cathinone drugs such as MDPV (first generation of bath salts) and takes the form of a white or pink, foul-smelling crystal that can be eaten, snorted, injected, or vaporized in an e-cigarette or similar device. Vaporizing, which sends the drug very quickly into the bloodstream, may make it particularly easy to overdose. Like other drugs of this type, alphaPVP can cause “excited delirium” that involves hyperstimulation, paranoia, and hallucinations that can lead to violent aggression and self-injury. The precursors and the chemical itself can be ordered over the Internet from chemical laboratories in China or Pakistan. It is estimated that there are 160,000 such labs in China alone. Bags of Confiscated Flakka Ingredients added to synthetics: What is the appeal of dangerous synthetics? Ammonia nitrate Caffeine Cocaine Dextromethorphan Ephedrine Ketamine Klonopin Lidocaine (athlete’s foot powder) Methamphetamine Methylone Rat poison For drug dealers, the profit margin can be very high for synthetics. “Research chemicals” can be ordered in bulk on the Internet from labs in China. Drugs can be sold over the Internet and delivered unwittingly by the postal service or commercial carrier. Drug bazaars operate on the “dark” Internet where encrypted transactions are conducted with virtual currencies. Due to marketing schemes and word of mouth, users have the misconception that synthetics are legal and that they are not as harmful as “traditional” drugs. Nothing could be further from the truth. In many cases, synthetic drugs are many times more potent that traditional drugs, and users often are unsure about the “correct dosage.” The most dangerous factor is that consumers never know exactly what they are buying or ingesting (short of a full-blown chemical analysis from a lab). Synthetics are often sold with dangerous additives and cutting agents. There is another aspect to the appeal of synthetic drugs — people experimenting with synthetic psychoactive drugs in pursuit of “alternate consciousness” and expanding their minds. Synthetics promise “psychonauts” a mind trip designed to their own lifestyle specifications. MDPV and its cousin, mephedrone, are synthetic variants of an organic class of stimulants called cathinones, found in a plant called khat that is native to the Middle East and East Africa. Khat leaves have been chewed for centuries to deliver the same jolt synthetic users are seeking in the grains and powders of today’s designer drugs. (Many Americans became acquainted with khat from the 2013 movie Captain Phillips — it’s the plant the Somali pirates are chewing through much of the action.) Synthetic repackaging of cathinone molecules has been the focus of lab experiments since the 1930s. In nearly all cases the drugs are designed to breach the blood-brain barrier (the brain’s protective chemical firewall) and tweak neurochemical functions, such as blocking the reuptake of the “excitatory” What is Flakka or Gravel? The main ingredient in the drug flakka or gravel is α-Pyrrolidinovalerophenone Hydrochloride or DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 4 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine – which produces a sort of electrically-charged euphoria. This effect is a toxic amplification of effects inherent to certain psychotherapeutic drugs. Flakka is thought to be a word derived from the Spanish word “flaca,” meaning “skinny,” and in Hispanic cultures is generally thought to refer to a beautiful, elegantly thin woman. Some users dispute this explanation, claiming the name comes from the effects of the drug. A flakka user in San Antonio, Texas said, “The people that normally smoke crack don’t want crack. This is the new crack.” Kicking the addiction can be difficult. Besides the shaking and sweating, he has anxiety and painful arthritis-like effects in his joints. “It’s always going to be a temptation, its going to ruin your life, guaranteed,” he told a reporter. Street names and brand names for synthetic cathinones: $5 Insanity Bath salts Bloom Blue Silk Cloud Nine Flakka Gravel Hurricane Charlie Ivory Wave Lunar Wave Molly Ocean Snow Purple Wave Red Dove Scarface Vanilla Sky White Lightning “It is a perfect storm of new trends. Before the Internet, these things took years to evolve. Now trends accelerate in seconds.” — DEA Special Agent Gary Boggs One kilogram of alpha-PVP provides up to 10,000 doses, explained epidemiologist Hall. Each dose is one tenth of a gram—enough to produce the desired effects and mild hallucinations—and sells for $5 or less on the street. “Flakka can be purchased online from the dark web (unregulated Internet web) at a relatively low price,” Hall said in a news account. “It can go for $1,500 a kilo so a dealer is looking at a potential $48,500 profit.” In south Florida, a network of loosely affiliated local crime rings are flakka’s biggest pushers, according to Hall. “The homeless population is also involved in its sale and distribution,” he said. A major attraction of flakka or gravel is its cheap cost to users and the profit margin for dealers and manufacturers. “The profit margin for these drugs is why we feel it’s one of the reasons it’s so popular in this area,” said Lt. Mulllins of Wise County, Va. We have purchased it undercover for as high as $175 a gram while dealers can buy it for as low as $3 a gram (unconfirmed). Law enforcement experience with gravel dates back to the fall of 2013 in northeastern Tennessee, specifically Kingsport (Sullivan County) and Johnson City (Washington County). There were 20 incidents involving gravel abuse in Kingsport during September-October 2013. “Gravel can potentially be even more dangerous than the synthetic drugs we were dealing with last year, mainly because you do not know for sure what other drugs have been mixed with the PVP,” said Sullivan County Sheriff’s Office PIO Leslie Earhart in a news account. “There have been reports of dealers trying to pass straight ammonia nitrate off as gravel.” Again, extreme paranoia was exhibited as a symtom of gravel abuse, resulting in officer safety issues. DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 5 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs One man assaulted his girlfriend because she had placed surveillance equipment in all their electrical appliances. Police have struggled with victims or suspects while subduing or arresting them. “There’s horror stories we’re hearing about this stuff,” said Kingsport Detective Nathan Elliott. “It’s worse than bath salts, in relation to women waking up in a room surrounded by men, not knowing what happened.” Washington County Lt. Doug Gregg described abusers of gravel. “They have a tendency to be very violent. You can’t predict what they’re going to do.” He said the alpha-PVP was found as small rocks, similar to crack cocaine. Many abusers were injecting the drug. The medical center in Johnson City saw several cases of patients showing up after injecting gravel. 19 percent of U.S. males and 11 percent of U.S. females reported having used hallucinogens in a 2009 survey. — U.S. Substance Abuse & Mental Health Data Archive (SAMHDA). the arrests of more than 90 individuals and the seizure of more than five million packets of finished synthetic designer drugs and the ingredients to produce 13.6 million more packets. In June 2013, the DEA announced enforcement actions in 35 states “targeting the upper echelon of dangerous designer synthetic drug trafficking organizations” as part of the cooperative operation, Project Synergy. According to the DEA, these enforcement actions involved retailers, wholesalers, and manufacturers, and exposed “the massive flow of drug-related proceeds back to countries in the Middle East and elsewhere.” In May 2014, as part of Project Synergy Phase II, the DEA arrested more than 150 individuals and seized “hundreds of thousands of individually packaged, ready-to-sell synthetic drugs as well as hundreds of kilograms of raw synthetic products to make thousands more.” The DEA stated that a number of Project Synergy cases will be prosecuted under the Analogue Enforcement Act. Since Project Synergy began Dec. 1, 2012, more than 227 arrests were made and 416 search warrants served in 35 states, 49 cities and five countries, along with more than $51 million in cash and assets seized. Altogether, 9,445 kilograms of individually packaged, ready-to-sell synthetic drugs, 299 kilograms of cathinone drugs, 1,252 kilograms of cannabinoid drugs, and 783 kilograms of treated plant material were seized. The second phase of Project Synergy, January-June 2014, culminated in 29 states, involves more than 45 DEA offices serving nearly 200 search warrants. More than 150 individuals have been arrested, and federal, state and local law enforcement authorities have seized hundreds of thousands of individually packaged, ready-to-sell synthetic drugs as well as hundreds of kilograms of raw synthetic products to make thousands more. Additionally, more than $20 million in cash and assets were seized. These numbers are expected to grow as investigations continue. Lab cases, ER visits, poison reports There were 1,706 crime lab cases in 2014 involving synthetic cathinones (bath salts) in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties, accounting for more than half of all such cases in Florida, according to the DEA. In the United States, synthetic cathinones, which encompasses flakka and bath salts, rose from 14,239 to 16,500 annual cases from 2012 to 2013. Flakka cases are significantly increasing from no reported cases in 2010 to 85 cases in 2012, and greater than 670 in 2014. No statistics are available on reported cases in 2015 thus far. Today, 15 to 20 percent of the patients enrolled in treatment programs in South Florida were admitted for flakka. Standard treatment for someone who overdoses on a stimulant involves not stimulating them anymore and actively sedating them, said Mark DeBard, an emergency physician and an emergency medicine professor at Ohio State University. “In general, the best guidelines are to make them safe and yourself safe, and to minimize restraint as they undergo getting medical help,” DeBard told FoxNews. Flakka Prosecutions Over the past several years, the DEA has led major enforcement efforts against the synthetic drug industry. In July 2012, Operation Log Jam yielded DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 6 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Seizures from Project Synergy in Gulfport, Miss. In March 2015, the West Palm Beach District Office received information from the DEA London Country Office regarding an international mail-forwarding company exporting shipments of flakka from Hong Kong to West Palm Beach. Between March 24 and April 2, 2015, agents from WPBDO seized approximately nine kilograms of flakka. On March 26, agents conducted a controlled delivery of a commercial service package containing two kilograms of flakka to a suspect who was believed to have direct ties to at least six of the nine kilograms of seized flakka. Agents arrested two individuals—a 22-year-old woman and her boyfriend--and seized a black Audi Q7, Chevy Silverado 2500, $68,725 in cash, a Glock .40-caliber Model 27 pistol, and miscellaneous marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Between February and March 2015, agents from WPBDO and the Tactical Diversion Squad conducted a series of operations in conjunction with the Broward Sheriff’s Office, U.S. Postal Service and PBSO, which resulted in the seizure of approximately 7.6 kilograms of flakka. The drug had been sent directly from China to vacant residences in West Palm Beach via commercial courier service, and to California via U.S. Postal Service. Flakka sold from China has a reported wholesale value of $1,500 to $2,000 per kilogram. In South Florida, the reported street value is $6,000 per kilogram and $500 per ounce. Police in the past year have arrested a number of Americans who purchased bulk quantities of alphaPVP from Chinese companies, including two men in Wisconsin, a university student in New York, and a man and woman in Minnesota. Synthetic Marijuana-Spice and K2 Although synthetic marijuana, known as Spice or K2, has been around for several years, law enforcement is reporting a recent spike in overdoses and medical treatments for abuse that has them concerned. The American Association of Poison Control Centers reported more than 1,900 calls related to synthetic pot have been made since the start of 2015. That’s four times more than there were last year during the same time period. Epidemic of Overdoses in Southeast The Alabama Department of Public Health issued a statement in April 2015 acknowledging a rise of (Continued on Page 9) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 7 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 8 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs synthetic marijuana usage and said there had been 98 overdoses suspected to be linked with Spice in the previous month. Mobile County has seen seven cases in the first four months of 2015, more than the entire previous year. In Tuscaloosa, hospitals reported 24 Spice overdoses — including one death and others on life support — in 13 days through April 9, leading the Chief of Police to call the situation “a public health crisis and a public safety crisis.” In the city of Fairfield, on the other side of the state, officials reported four suspected Spice overdoses in just six hours on April 13. Mississippi health officials are also concerned that synthetic marijuana is on the rise. Ninety-seven cases over an eight-day span in April were reported to the Mississippi Poison Control Center, a Department of Health press release said. More than 30 people who had used Spice were treated in emergency rooms in Jackson, Miss. over the weekend of April 4-5, 2015, according to the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics. Other case have been reported on the Gulf Coast and in Meridian, Philadelphia and Monticello, officials said. Some of the patients were combative and violent. Some showed signs of agitation, sweating, and hallucinations. Some arrived comatose. According to news accounts, West Alabama drug agents are seeing a “dramatic increase” in overdoses and arrests related to Spice, a form of synthetic marijuana that they say is one of the worst drugs they’ve ever dealt with, according to a release from the Tuscaloosa Police Department. In March-April 2015, more than 20 people who overdosed on Spice needed medical attention. In 2014, the West Alabama Narcotics unit seized more than 66 pounds of Spice valued at more than $598,000 and arrested suspects on 62 Spice-related charges, the release stated. So far in 2015, they’ve seized about four pounds of Spice valued at $34,000 and arrested people on 20 Spice-related charges. In the past, the drug was packaged in a foil-like container with approximately four grams, but now agents are seeing small Ziploc bags with one gram of Spice that sell for around $20. On March 12, 2015, a Birmingham, Ala. man was sentenced to more than five years in prison for Street names and brand names for synthetic cannabinoids: B2 Da Bomb Black Mamba Bliss Bomb Marley Diablo Fake weed or fake Genie Incense K2 K3 Mojo Moon Rocks Nice Roses Skunk Spice Spice Diamond Street Legal V8 WTF Yucatan Fire Zohai manufacturing and selling Spice (XLR11) through a website he ran at his Southside apartment called “Bob’s Bud” and “bobswackytobacky.” He sold the drugs as herbal incense. He also sold the so-called “research chemical” 5FUR144 in bulk, $50 for five grams or $5,000 for a kilogram. He told the court that the source for most of the chemicals was a lab in China. Among high school seniors nationwide, synthetic marijuana is the second-most widely used class of illicit drug after marijuana, according to the 2012 Monitoring the Future drug survey. The District of Columbia Prevention Center reports that fake weed use among youth has increased significantly since 2008. The average age of a fake weed user in D.C. is 13 years old. According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC), poison control centers around the country received 2,906 calls about synthetic cannabinoid substances in 2010, up from a reported 14 calls in 2009. In 2011, these calls increased to 6,968, and declined to 5,230 in 2012 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 9 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs and 2,663 in 2013. From January through June 2014, there were 1,445 reported calls regarding human exposure to synthetic cannabinoids. At least 42 states and Puerto Rico have legislatively banned chemical substances contained in synthetic cannabinoids. The U.S. military has also banned personnel from possessing or using these substances. Since April 1, 2015, the Upstate New York Poison Control Center has received reports of 179 people – most of them in the Syracuse area – who received hospital care after using the illicit drug. There have been 11 cases since May 1. Poison control centers nationwide have reported 2,576 cases through May 4. Some arrive at emergency rooms comatose. Also reported are cases in New York City. In the summer of 2014, the New York City Department of Health issued a warning to the public regarding the dangers of synthetic cannabinoid use after 15 people experienced “severe adverse reactions after suspected ingestion of synthetic cannabinoids” over a period of three days. The department also reported that NYC emergency department visits related to synthetic cannabinoids were up 220 percent during the first six months of 2014. Officials in New Hampshire have declared a state of emergency. Epidemics of Spice-related overdoses go back several years. Reports of overdoses are not new. Approximately 120 people in Dallas and Austin, Texas overdosed on synthetic marijuana within a four-day span in May 2014. The supplier of the drug was based in Dallas. “We don’t know what they are putting into these synthetic drugs,” said Dr. James d’Etienne of Baylor Medical Center, where most of patients who overdosed on synthetic marijuana were taken. “Several of them came in with similar symptoms of psychosis, altered mental status, abnormal behavior - ranged from very sedated to an agitated state.” In December 2013, Wise County, Va. experienced 16 “fake marijuana” overdoses in one day. During 2013, 85 percent of Dothan, Ala. police callouts for narcotic investigators from the patrol division involved synthetic marijuana. In a news account, Lt. Bubba Ott, supervisor of the department’s drug division, said most of the usual drugs (cocaine, meth and marijuana) are on the rise, but synthetic marijuana has quickly risen to one of the most commonly “These things are dangerous – anybody who uses them is playing Russian roulette. They have profound psychological effects. We never intended them for human consumption.” — Clemson University Professor John Huffman, creator of JWH-018, a synthetic cannabinoid abused drugs across the city. “It’s our number one biggest problem right now,” Ott said. “We’re having an epidemic of the synthetic marijuana.” In October 2014, MAB-CHMINACA, ADBCHMINACA (sold as “Mojo,” “Spice,” “K2,” and “Scooby Snax”) resulted in more than 150 hospital visits in Baton Rouge and Lafayette, La., prompting the governor to ban the drug in that state. How Dangerous is Synthetic Marijuana? Officials contribute usage of synthetic marijuana to the fact that it is cheap and easily available online and that usage rarely shows up on drug screening tests. But the main reason, especially for younger users, is (Continued on Page 12) Misbranded synthetic cannabinoids OCDETF cases against James M. Bolin and James P. Bolin, New Lenox, Ill., February 2014. AK-47 24 Karat Gold Potpourri Bizarro Caution Blitzen Herbal Potpourri Caution Platinum Super Strong Incense Caution Silver Super Strong Incense Cherry Bomb Darkness Prince Diablo Botanical Incense G-20 Herbal Potpourri Hip Hop Joker Herbal Potpourri Kronik Kryptonite Herbal Potpourri Mr. Happy OMG Next Generation Out World Smoking Santa ZenBio Sonic Zero Blueberry ZenBio Sonic Zero Cherry DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 10 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Why Synthetic Marijuana Is More Toxic To The Brain Than Pot 1. It’s much more efficient at binding and acting in the brain 4. The body doesn’t know how to deactivate synthetics One reason that synthetic cannabis can trigger everything from seizures to psychosis is how it acts in the brain. Like the active ingredient in pot, THC, synthetic cannabis binds the CB1 receptor. But when it binds, it acts as a full agonist, rather than a partial agonist, meaning that it can activate a CB1 receptor on a brain cell with maximum efficacy, rather than only partially, as with THC. “The first rule of toxicology is, the dose makes the poison,” says Jeff Lapoint, MD, an emergency room doctor and medical toxicologist. “Synthetic cannabinoids are tailormade to hit cannabinoid receptors – and hit it hard. This is not marijuana. Its action in the brain may be similar but the physical effect is so different.” Another issue is its potency, which is huge. “Its potency can be up to one hundred or more times greater than THC – that’s how much drug it takes to produce an effect,” says Paul Prather, PhD, professor of pharmacology and toxicology at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. One possibility is that the metabolites of synthetic cannabis are also doing damage to the brain. Usually our bodies deactivate a drug as it metabolizes it, but this may not be the case with synthetic. “What we’re finding from our research,” says Prather, “is that some of the metabolites of synthetic cannabis bind to the receptor just as well as the drug itself – this isn’t the case with THC. The synthetic metabolites seem to retain full activity relative to the parent compound. So the ability of our bodies to deactivate them may be decreased.” Synthetic cannabis lacks cannabidiol, which is present in natural marijuana and appears to blunt some of the adverse actions of the THC. 5. Quality control is nonexistent Synthetic cannabis is made in underground labs, often in China, and probably elsewhere. The only consistent thing is that there’s no quality control in the formulation process. “Is Crazy Monkey today the same as Crazy Monkey tomorrow?” Prather asks. “No way. The makers take some random herb, and spray it with cannabinoid. They’re probably using some cheap sprayer to spray it by hand. How much synthetic cannabis is in there? You have no idea how much you’re getting.” He adds that there are almost always “hot spots” present in the drug – places where the drug is way more concentrated than others. “Plus, there’s almost always more than one synthetic cannabinoid present in these things – usually four or five different ones.” The bottom line: There’s no telling what you’re getting in a bag of Spice or K2. 2. CB1 receptors are everywhere in the brain A central reason that synthetic cannabis can produce such an enormous variety of side effects is likely because CB1 receptors are present in just about every brain region there is. When you have a strong-binding and long-lasting compound going to lots of different areas of the brain, you’re going to get some very bad effects. Their presence in the hippocampus affects memory; their presence in seizure initiation areas in the temporal cortex is why they lead to seizures. And in the prefrontal cortex, this is probably why you see stronger psychosis with synthetic cannabinoids. The cardiac, respiratory, and gastrointestinal effects probably come from the CB1 receptors in the brain stem. Any one of these may present the greatest risk of death. 6. The drugs are always evolving “Someone’s just kind of riffing off JWH,” says Lapoint. There are hundreds of different forms of JWH, and of other synthetic cannabinoids designed by different labs, and the next one is always waiting to go. “It only takes a grad school chemist level to pull it off,” he says. “The first JWH in incense blends was found in Germany around 2008 – it was the JWH-018 in Spice. It took months for the local authorities to figure out what was in it and regulate it. The next week incense blends with another compound, JWH-073, came out. They already had it ready to go – and they’re making something that’s not even illegal yet.” 3. A synthetic cannabis overdose looks totally different from a pot “overdose” The clearest proof that synthetic cannabis is a different thing all together is that overdose with the drug looks totally different from an “overdose” with natural marijuana. “Clinically, they just don’t look like people who smoke marijuana,” says Lewis Nelson, MD, at NYU’s Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Medical Toxicology. “Pot users are usually interactive, mellow, funny. Every once in a while we see a bad trip with natural marijuana. But it goes away quickly. With people using synthetic, they look like people who are using amphetamines: they’re angry, sweaty, agitated.” Source (excerpts): “Why Synthetic Marijuana Is More Toxic To The Brain Than Pot” Forbes.com, by Alice Walton, Aug. 28, 2014 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 11 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Law Enforcement Investigations and Prosecutions “The first rule of toxicology is, the dose makes the poison…Synthetic cannabinoids are tailor-made to hit cannabinoid receptors – and hit it hard. This is NOT marijuana. Its action in the brain may be similar but the physical effect is so different.” Lt. Mullins said a two-year undercover investigation in 2012-13 shut down a dozen stores selling synthetic drugs in his jurisdiction. The stores were doing $100,000 in sales per month, he said. “Basically, what we did was drive it underground,” he said about “fake” dealers. “Now you have to know somebody.” He said that in early May 2015 search warrants were executed on two women who were buying bulk potpourri in North Carolina for about $6 per gram and selling it back home for $25 per gram (enough for a twoday high). They were cutting 10-gram bags down into $1 baggies. Although they were living on public assistance, the women were bringing in $30,000 to $50,000 per month in drug sales. On April 21, 2015, Arkansas State Police stopped a rental car in Miller County. The driver claimed to be en route from Houston, Texas to Milwaukee, Wis. A consensual search of the vehicle revealed a total of 2.5 pounds of synthetic marijuana packed in five one-gallon Ziploc bags and 450 packets of “Spice” synthetic marijuana in the passenger compartment. Two days later, the West Tennessee Drug Task Force (28th District) responded to a call in Gibson County, where ambulance personnel were requesting immediate police assistance due to “two combative subjects possibly under the influence of an unknown drug.” It took more than a dozen police and emergency personnel to subdue both subjects. One subject was flown to the trauma center in Jackson, Tenn. and the other transported by ground and later transported to the same trauma center. Both were in critical condition after using a Spice brand known as Super Magic. Agents believe the drugs originated at a convenience store in Texas. On April 20, a Connecticut man was sentenced in federal court in Gulfport, Miss. to 120 years in prison for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and possessing with intent to distribute chemicals used in the manufacture of Spice (AM2201). “These synthetic substances are designed and manufactured with no controls on the safety of the substance, and no goal other than generating a more powerful high for the user, and a larger profit for the drug dealers who sell these dangerous drugs,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Keith Brown. The defendant was — Jeff Lapoint, MD, emergency room doctor and medical toxicologist the misconception that it is legal and safer, or as safe to use, than natural marijuana. Nothing could be further from the truth. In reality, synthetic marijuana is not marijuana at all. Synthetic marijuana consists of herbal substances or potpourri sprayed with a synthetic chemical which is a synthetic cannobinoid, an analog of THC. In essence, smoking fake marijuana produces effects more like methamphetamine than THC. In reality, as shown by recent overdoses, users cannot know which chemicals they are buying and ingesting into their bodies. “This is a stark reminder of how dangerous it can be to take chemicals that are manufactured without safety precautions. These are not made with any consideration for the people taking these drugs. They’re not regulated; they’re not controlled,” said Dr. Thomas Dobbs, the Mississippi Dept. of Health’s state epidemiologist. “So we strongly advise and vehemently advise that everyone avoid taking these mind-altering chemicals, because there’s no way they can be safe under any circumstances.” Clemson University Professor John Huffman is credited with first synthesizing some of the cannabinoids, such as JWH-018, now used in “fake pot” substances such as K2. The effects of JWH-018 can be 10 times stronger than those of THC. Dr. Huffman is quoted as saying, “These things are dangerous — anybody who uses them is playing Russian roulette. They have profound psychological effects. We never intended them for human consumption.” Lt. Mullins of Wise County, Va. said one user of fake marijuana beat his child to death. Another shot and killed his brother. Yet another abuser killed his parents while high on “fake.” DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 12 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs buying chemicals from China, marketing the drugs for sale on websites in the U.S., and shipping the drugs by commercial parcel service. Fifteen subjects were arrested in December 2014 in South Florida and charged with the sale and distribution of synthetic cannabinoids in six counties following an eight-month investigation known as Operation Synthetic Web. Eleven undercover purchases of Cloud Nine and similar drugs were made at convenience stores, with a store in Deerfield Beach pinpointed as the base of operations. Seized were eight kilos of Spice street-valued at $200,000 and 4,000 vials of liquid product valued at $160,000. The products contained XLR-11, AB-PINACA, and AB-FUBINACA. XLR-11 is a Schedule I Controlled Substance and the other two were outlawed by an Emergency Order, on October 9, 2013, by the Florida Attorney General. The liquid product, known as Diablo, was intended to be consumed in e-cigarettes or vaporizers. In October 2014, two brothers from Fort Wayne, Ind. were found guilty in federal court in Dallas, Texas, of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by introducing into interstate commerce misbranded drugs, i.e., synthetic marijuana branded as incense, potpourri, and air freshener. The drugs were “reviewed” for human consumption via videos posted on the Internet and sold in 38 states. Short List of Most Prominent Synthetic Drugs: MDA DOM LSA MDAI DOB DOI DOC DMT K GBL GHB TMA-2 AMT BZP 2C-B 2C-C 2C-D 2C-I 2C-T-7 5-MeO-DiPT 5-MeO-MIPT 5-MeO-DALT 5-MeO-DMT PCP MDE Other Synthetic / Designer Drugs Although gravel and Spice are in the news, there are many more synthetic drugs that deserve the attention of law enforcement and the community. Because chemists can easily tweak the formula of a chemical so that it mimics a known drug, there are thousands of designer drugs on the market today. However, two of the most common are MDMA (Ecstasy) and Fentanyl. 4-Acetoxy-DET 4-Acetoxy-DiPT FLEA 4-FA JHW-018 MPA AM-2201 AM-2233 4-MEC 4-EMC 5-APB 6-APB ALD MXE BHO Bromo-DragonFly Salvinorin A Soma Fentanyl Dilaudid Marinol Thujone Oxymorphone Hydromorphone MDMA toxic agent, based on postmortem examination and toxicology results. PMMA is so dangerous that it is known on the street as “Death” and “Dr. Death.” All of the victims believed they were consuming MDMA (Ecstasy). All tested positive for other stimulants, Ecstasy or Dr. Death? Twenty-seven deaths from June 2011 to April 2012 in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada were attributed to the hallucinogenic stimulant para-methoxyN-methylamphetamine (PMMA) as the primary (Continued on Page 15) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 13 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Summary of 27 deaths associated with the use of paramethoxymethamphetamine (PMMA) in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada, June 2011 to April 2012 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 14 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs including PMA, MDA, amphetamine, and cocaine. The median initial body temperature recorded at the hospital was 102.9 degrees Fahrenheit. Sixteen of the 17 patients who survived to arrive at the hospital had findings consistent with serotonin syndrome. Dysfunction seen in the hospital patients included renal failure, rhabdomyolysis, hepatic injury, coagulopathy, cardiac ischemia, and dysrhythmias. PMA (paramethoxyamphetamine) and PMMA are in the same class of drugs as MDMA or “Ecstasy” (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine). As with MDMA, these drugs tend to be distributed in colorful, branded tablets and are taken by mouth. Buyers may think they are getting MDMA, when in fact they are getting PMA/PMMA or some combination of different drugs. In other cases, users may be prompted to take PMA/PMMA together with MDMA to enhance the effects. These drugs are often taken for their purported euphoric and stimulant effects. Users report feeling “at peace” and as though “all is right with the world.” Users often also believe that these drugs may increase sexuality and enhance pleasure. Introverts think it makes them more social. PMA/PMMA is considered to be more toxic than MDMA, and more likely to cause side effects including seizures and increased body temperature. Also, the initial effects of PMA/PMMA are often delayed and milder than MDMA, leading users to believe they have taken a weak MDMA product. Users will then often take more of the drug in an attempt to get the desired effects. The other effects that can happen are similar to those from MDMA. It can often cause feelings of anxiety and paranoia. It can also lead to hallucinations (hearing voices or seeing things). Users report dry mouth, teeth grinding, sweating or nausea. Some may experience chest pain, and palpitations (an awareness of their heartbeat). Others may experience headache, weakness, or difficulty speaking. As with MDMA, PMA/PMMA can also have serious, life-threatening side effects when used on its own, and/or if combined with other medications (including anti-depressants). Another popular designer drug is called 2C-E. In May 2012 a 22-year-old Minnesota man was sentenced to 10 years in prison for providing the drug to party friends, one of whom died from an overdose which sickened ten others. The defendant thought he had bought the drug 2C-I over the Internet but instead purchased the far more potent 2C-E. The victim’s mother stated that the defendant was not a criminal. “He is a very young man who made bad choices.” In May 2011 in Konawa, Okla. a man and a woman in their early-20s died and six were injured when they took what they thought was 2C-E, but which seems actually to have been the extra-dangerous 3C-BromoDragonfly. These drugs are hallucinogens. The drug was bought off the Internet. The typical dose of Bromo-DragonFly is not known, however it has varied from 500 µg to 1 mg. It has about 300 times the potency of mescaline, or onefifth the potency of LSD. It has been sold in the form of blotters, similar to the distribution method of LSD, which has led to confusion, and reports of mistakenly consuming Bromo-DragonFly. It has a much longer duration of action than LSD and can last for up to two to three days, following a single large dose, with a slow onset of action that can take up to six hours [Hipster] points to the entry for the new hot synthetic psychedelic, the “N-bomb” (the NBOMe series), which resembles LSD in its effects but is shorterlasting and cheaper, at about $1 per dose. You have to be careful with the dosage, which must be measured in submilligrams: “A tiny amount is so powerful. I figured out that if you mix it with vodka and put it in a nasal-spray bottle, it’s a 15-minute come-up, peaks at an hour and a half, and you’re on your way out at two hours. The N-bomb is less intellectual and about giant God questions than LSD, and a little bit more in your body — great for dates or art museums.” The last time he took it, he went to his favorite tripping spot in Prospect Park, then to the Asian-art section of the Brooklyn Museum. “There was this Korean pot that was so beautiful that I got it in my head that it was unsafe ... and I had to smash the glass and rescue it. It was the first time in a long time that I almost made a mistake with psychedelics.” Excerpted from “Travels in the New Psychedelic Bazaar,” by Vanessa Grigoriadis, New York Magazine, 2013 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 15 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs before the effects are felt. In October 2000, a 20-year-old man in Norman, Okla., died from taking 2C-T-7. The Godfather of Psychedelics No one has contributed more to the advancement of synthetic psychoactive (psychedelic) drugs than Alexander Shulgin, aka Sasha Shulgin, who died in June 2014 at age 88. The inventor of more than 200 psychodelic compounds over several decades (he and his wife experimented with most of them personally), Shulgin was known as the Godfather of Ecstasy. Shulgin first became famous for inventing a biodegradable insecticide for Dow Chemical, which subsequently subsidized his experimentation (most of which he did in a makeshift lab in his sideyard). In 1976 he resynthesized MDMA or Ecstasy (it was first patented in 1914 by Merck) and recommended that it be used for psychotherapy. According to a New York Times profile written before Shulgin’s death: “In certain therapeutic circles, MDMA acquired a reputation as a wonder drug. Anecdotal accounts attested to its ability to induce in one session the sort of breakthroughs that normally took months or years of therapy. According to George Greer, a psychiatrist who in the early 80’s conducted MDMA therapy sessions with 80 patients, ‘Without exception, every therapist who I talked to or even heard of, every therapist who gave MDMA to a patient, was highly impressed by the results.’ “But the drug was also showing up in nightclubs in Dallas and Los Angeles, and in 1986 the DEA placed it in Schedule I. By the late 90’s, household surveys showed millions of teenagers and college students using it, and in 2000, U.S. Customs officials seized nearly 10 million pills. Parents and public officials worried that a whole generation was consigning itself to a life of drug-induced depression and cognitive decay.” Shulgin was largely able to avoid a DEA crackdown simply because most of the drugs that he worked on hadn’t previously existed outside of his lab, and therefore weren’t illegal yet. Eventually though, in the 1990s, Shulgin’s lab was raided and he was asked to turn over his Schedule I drug research license. “I’ve always been interested in the machinery of the Alexander “Sasha” Shulgin, the Godfather of Ecstasy mental process,’’ he said of his work. Shulgin also synthesized the nine “2C” (dimethoxyphenethylamines) synthetic hallucinogens. Shulgin dubbed them “2C” after the two-carbon bridge linking the benzene ring and amino group in these compounds. He described dozens of similar compounds in a 1991 book, PiHKAL (Phenethylamines I Have Known And Loved): A Chemical Love Story. Shulgin estimated he had personally taken about 4,000 psychedelic trips. He died of liver cancer. Fentanyl Danger Alert Fentanyl is a stimulant up to 50 times stronger than heroin. On March 18, 2015, the DEA issued a nationwide alert about the dangers of fentanyl and fentanyl analogues/compounds. Fentanyl is commonly laced in heroin, causing significant problems across the country, particularly as heroin abuse has increased. In the past two years, the DEA has seen a significant resurgence in fentanylrelated seizures. According to the National Forensic Laboratory Information System (NFLIS), state and local labs reported 3,344 fentanyl submissions in 2014, up from 942 in 2013. In addition, the DEA has identified 15 other fentanyl-related compounds. In its prescription form, fentanyl is known as Actiq, Duragesic, and Sublimaze. Street names for the drug DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 16 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs also issued warnings to law enforcement as fentanyl can be absorbed through the skin and accidental inhalation of airborne powder can also occur. Law enforcement could come in contact with fentanyl on the streets during the course of enforcement, such as a buy-walk, or buy-bust operation. According to most sources, however, fentanyl is most common in jurisdictions outside the Southeast. Chemicals manufactured in China From 2008 to 2013, the DEA identified between 200 and 300 new designers drugs from eight different structural classes, the vast majority of which are manufactured in China. Hamilton Morris, who filmed a recent HBO documentary, “Synthetic Drug Revolution,” talked about Chinese labs: “The scale of it, the level of sophistication, I think, would be surprising to people. Some of the laboratories that are manufacturing these compounds are also contracted to synthesize intermediates for major pharmaceutical companies. This isn’t what you’d imagine a clandestine laboratory to be like. It’s not people mixing things in a bathtub or in a trash can. They’re fully functioning pharmaceutical laboratories with hundreds of thousands of dollars of analytical equipment.” He added, “There is no division between the normal include Apache, China girl, China white, dance fever, friend, goodfella, jackpot, murder 8, TNT, as well as Tango and Cash. Fentanyl is a Schedule II narcotic used as an analgesic and anesthetic. It is the most potent opioid available for use in medical treatment – 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and 30 to 50 times more potent than heroin. Fentanyl is potentially lethal, even at very low levels. Ingestion of small doses as small as 0.25 mg can be fatal. Its euphoric effects are indistinguishable from morphine or heroin. DEA has DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 17 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs market for fine chemicals in China and the gray market because the firms there aren’t thinking of cannabinoids as illicit drugs. One day they might be making a treatment for androgenic alopecia, the next day they might be making a tomato-rooting hormone, and the day after that they might be making an indole-based cannabinoid. It doesn’t matter to them. It’s just a chemical.” The southern province of Guangdong, which abuts Hong Kong, is China’s synthetic drug factory, thanks in part to the area’s traditional proficiency in making Chinese medicine, which includes one of the key natural ingredients in methamphetamine, which is replicated in synthetic drugs like flakka. Federal Scheduling Schedule I Schedule I drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. Schedule I drugs are the most dangerous drugs of all the drug schedules with potentially severe psychological or physical dependence. Some examples of Schedule I drugs are: heroin, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), marijuana (cannabis), 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (ecstasy), methaqualone, and peyote Schedule II Schedule II drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with a high potential for abuse, less abuse potential than Schedule I drugs, with use potentially leading to severe psychological or physical dependence. These drugs are also considered dangerous. Some examples of Schedule II drugs are: Synthetic Drug Scheduling In 2011, the Attorney General – through the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) – used his temporary scheduling authority to place five synthetic cannabinoids and three synthetic stimulants on Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Concern over the reported increase in use of certain synthetic cannabinoids and stimulants resulted in legislative action to schedule specific substances. The Synthetic Drug Abuse Prevention Act of 2012 – Subtitle D of Title XI of the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act (P.L. 112144) – added five structural classes of substances in synthetic cannabinoids (and their analogues) as well as 11 synthetic stimulants and hallucinogens to Schedule I of the CSA. In addition, the act extended the DEA’s authority to temporarily schedule substances. In April 2013, the Attorney General – through the DEA and in consultation with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) – took administrative action to permanently place methylone on Schedule I of the CSA. A number of scheduling actions have since taken place. Most recently in March 2014, the Attorney General – again through the DEA – used his temporary scheduling authority to place 10 synthetic cathinones on Schedule I of the CSA. Once scheduled through this temporary scheduling process, a substance may remain on Schedule I for two years. The Attorney General then has the authority to keep the substance on Schedule I for an additional one year before it must be removed or permanently scheduled. Combination products with less than 15 milligrams of hydrocodone per dosage unit (Vicodin), cocaine, methamphetamine, methadone, hydromorphone (Dilaudid), meperidine (Demerol), oxycodone (OxyContin), fentanyl, Dexedrine, Adderall, and Ritalin Schedule III Schedule III drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with a moderate to low potential for physical and psychological dependence. Schedule III drugs abuse potential is less than Schedule I and Schedule II drugs but more than Schedule IV. Some examples of Schedule III drugs are: Products containing less than 90 milligrams of codeine per dosage unit (Tylenol with codeine), ketamine, anabolic steroids, testosterone Schedule IV Schedule IV drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with a low potential for abuse and low risk of dependence. Some examples of Schedule IV drugs are: Xanax, Soma, Darvon, Darvocet, Valium, Ativan, Talwin, Ambien, Tramadol Schedule V Schedule V drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with lower potential for abuse than Schedule IV and consist of preparations containing limited quantities of certain narcotics. Schedule V drugs are generally used for antidiarrheal, antitussive, and analgesic purposes. Some examples of Schedule V drugs are: cough preparations with less than 200 milligrams of codeine or per 100 milliliters (Robitussin AC), Lomotil, Motofen, Lyrica, Parepectolin DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 18 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs One could argue that drugs are an essential part of the futurist spirit of the moment, in full swoon with tech and science, and “now in the mainstream blossoming of the mid-nineties underground ‘techno pagan’ culture,” as author and psychedelic historian Erik Davis puts it. The process of selecting, sampling, and sometimes resynthesizing drugs is also connected to the do-it-yourself culture of computer hacking, another democratized technology. Many of these new experimenters feel that simply by journaling their experiences on the Internet, they are adding to the sum of scientific knowledge about these compounds— which, to a certain sort of person, means progress. Information on state drug scheduling can be found on the website of the National Association of State Controlled Substances Authorities (NASCSA) There has never been a time when we’ve been more open to the recognition that, as Hamilton Morris says, “everything is chemical in the world,” so there’s no reason to think that putting “chemicals in your brain, which is made of chemicals, is bad.” Since 2002, the DEA used its temporary scheduling authority on 33 synthetic substances. Prior to 2002, the most recent time the DEA exercised this authority was in 1995. Over the past several years, the DEA has taken several temporary scheduling actions. • In May 2013, the DEA placed three synthetic cannabinoids on the list of controlled substances under Schedule I of the CSA. • In November 2013, the DEA placed three synthetic phenethylamines on Schedule I. • In February 2014, the DEA placed four synthetic cannabinoids on Schedule I. • In March 2014, the DEA placed 10 synthetic cathinones on Schedule I. Of note, the last 33 substances to have been temporarily (and, for 6 of them, subsequently permanently) placed on Schedule I of the CSA are synthetic substances. But there’s another viewpoint. National ER visits, the accepted metric for drug trends, found a record 49 novel compounds in 2011. “We’re starting to get a big-time problem with these new drugs,” says Rusty Payne, an agent at the DEA’s national office. “It turns out that we, as Americans, have an appetite for silly things like synthetics.” Excerpted from “Travels in the New Psychedelic Bazaar,” by Vanessa Grigoriadis, New York Magazine, 2013 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 19 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs ROCIC Can Assist With Your Investigations I nformation sharing is vitally important to drug investigations. The Criminal Intelligence Unit can provide valuable background information on suspects and organizations. The RISSIntel database holds a wealth of information on drug topics, as does the RISSLeads Website. RISSafe can be used to prevent blue-on-blue safety conflicts. RISSGang provides information on drug gangs and others involved in the drug trade. Each month ROCIC Publications distributes a Bulletin PDF containing investigative articles from 14 states in the Southeast, and Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Publications unit also posts new crime articles daily on http://rocic.riss.net/publications so officers can stay up-to-date on recent crimes and trends. The ROCIC Publications Unit produces reports on topics of interest to law enforcement. ROCIC Publications has produced at least five relevant Special Research Reports of interest to investigators; all can be found on the secure ROCIC Website: • • • • Bath Salts: Deadly New Designer Drug Emerging Drug Trends DMT: Psychedelic Hallucinogen Vapor: Concentrated THC, Electronic Cigarettes and Vaporizers • Penetrating the Darknet The ROCIC Technical Services Unit loans out equipment to agencies with limited budgets. Tutorial videos on video surveillance systems, GPS trackers, and cameras are available at http://rocic.riss.net/ publications/tour. The ROCIC Analytical Unit can help officers prepare for court. Cell tower maps can be developed, photos can be blown up for court presentations, video surveillance footage can be enhanced, evidence can be retrieved from electronic devices, and timelines and charts can be produced. Training announcements for drug investigators, and other types of crimes, are posted to ROCIC’s training website on www.rocic.com and distributed by their Law Enforcement Coordinators. LECs also distribute BOLOs, bulletins, and other information throughout the region using specialized email distribution lists. ►Call 1-800-238-7985 for more information on how ROCIC can assist your investigation. DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 20 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Information on Synthetic Drugs DEA Fact Sheets on synthetic drugs and many other drugs are available for download at: http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/drug_chem_info/index.html The descriptions on these pages are excerpted and do not include chemical and pharmacology data, for example. Most are dated 2012 or 2013. Synthetic Cannabinoids AB-FUBINACA products that are smoked for their psychoactive effects. Poison control centers continue to report adverse health effects in response to the abuse of synthetic cannabinoids and this abuse is both a public health and safety concern. STRIDE and NFLIS contain 896 reports in 2013. Bulk quantities and plant material (synthetic cannabinoid products) laced with ABFUBINACA have been encountered. AB-FUBINACA is a synthetic cannabinoid recently encountered on the designer drug market and has been found laced on plant material and marketed under the guise of herbal incense products. ABFUBINACA was previously reported in a patent by Pfizer in 2009. There are no commercial or medical uses for this substance. AB-FUBINACA has been encountered in numerous synthetic cannabinoid AKB48 (APINACA) and 5F-AKB48 (5F-APINACA) to the abuse of herbal incense products and this abuse is both a public health and safety concern. STRIDE and NFLIS contain 47 reports for AKB48 in 2011. In 2012, these databases contain 527 reports for AKB48 and 81 reports for 5F-AKB48 or FluoroAKB48 (isomer undetermined). Bulk quantities and plant material (herbal incense products) laced with AKB48 and 5F-AKB48 have been encountered. AKB48 and 5F-AKB48 were not previously reported in the scientific literature prior to their appearance on the designer drug market. There are no commercial or medical uses for these substances. AKB48 and 5F-AKB48 have been encountered as adulterants in numerous herbal products that are smoked for their psychoactive effects. Poison control centers continue to report adverse health effects in response CP-47,497 and homologues 5-(1,1-Dimethylheptyl)-2-[(1R,3S)-3-hydroxycyclohexyl]-phenol [Synthetic Cannabinoid in Herbal Products] identified in herbal incense mixtures which are smoked for their psychoactive effects. The primary abusers are youth purchasing these substances from internet websites, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. Federal, state, and local forensic laboratories identified 17 exhibits as CP-47,497 and its C8 homologue from 2010 to 2012. CP-47,497 is a synthetic cannabinoid agonist without the classical cannabinoid chemical structure. It is used in scientific research as a tool to study the cannabinoid system. CP-47,497 and its homologues have been identified in herbal incense mixtures, with names including “Spice”, “K2”, and others, sold via the Internet, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. CP-47,497 homologues have been (Continued on Next Page) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 21 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Synthetic Cannabinoids (cont.) HU-210 [(6aR,10aR)-9-(hydroxymethyl)-6,6-dimethyl-3-(2-methyloctan-2-yl)-6a,7,10,10a-tetrahydrobenzo[c] chromen-1-ol)] [Purported Ingredient of “Spice”] HU-210 is structurally and pharmacologically similar to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main active ingredient of marijuana, and it was synthesized around 1988. It was recently purported to be found in the herbal mixture “Spice”, sold in European countries mainly via internet shops. HU-210 is in schedule I of the U.S. Controlled Substances Act. licit Uses: HU-210 is purported to be an ingredient in the herbal mixture “Spice” which may be smoked for its psychoactive effects. JWH-018 1-Pentyl-3-(1-naphthoyl)indole [Synthetic Cannabinoid in Herbal Products] in numerous herbal incense products including “Spice”, “K2”, and other similar products which are smoked for their psychoactive effects. The primary abusers are youth purchasing these substances from Internet websites, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. JWH-018 exhibits identified by forensic laboratories increased from 21 in 2009 to 3,264 in 2011. In 2012, the number of JWH-018 identified exhibits decreased to 982. JWH-018 is a synthetic cannabinoid agonist without the classical cannabinoid chemical structure. It was used in scientific research as a tool to study the cannabinoid system. JWH-018 has been identified in herbal incense mixtures, with names including “Spice”, “K2”, and others, sold via the Internet, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. JWH-018 substance has no known legitimate use outside of research and is purposely spiked on plant material. It has been identified JWH-073 1-Butyl-3-(1-naphthoyl)indole [Synthetic Cannabinoid in Herbal Products] herbal products including “Spice”, “K2”, “K3”, and others. These products are smoked for their psychoactive effects. The primary abusers are youth purchasing these substances from Internet websites, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. JWH-073 exhibits identified by forensic laboratories increased from 2 in 2009 to 573 in 2011. In 2012, the number of JWH-073 identified exhibits decreased to 118. JWH-073 is a synthetic cannabinoid agonist without the classical cannabinoid chemical structure. It is used in scientific research as a tool to study the cannabinoid system. JWH-073 has been identified in herbal incense mixtures, with names including “Spice”, “K2”, and others, sold via the Internet, gas stations, convenience stores, tobacco shops and head shops. JWH-073 has no known legitimate use outside of research and the substance has been identified spiked on plant material in numerous (Continued on Next Page) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 22 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Synthetic Cannabinoids (cont.) PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 are two synthetic cannabinoids recently encountered on the designer drug market. Both PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 have been found laced on plant material and marketed under the guise of herbal incense products. PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 are likely to share effects with two schedule I substances also encountered laced on plant material, JWH-018 and AM2201. In response to State and Federal control of JWH-018 and other synthetic cannabinoids, a transition to new synthetic cannabinoids laced on plant material has been observed. 5F-PB-22 for human use. PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 were not previously reported prior to their appearance on the designer drug market. There are no commercial or medical uses for these substances. PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 have been encountered in numerous herbal products that are smoked for their psychoactive effects. Information on user population in the U.S. is limited, and includes information from drug user internet forums. PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 abuse is not monitored by any national drug abuse surveys. Poison control centers continue to report adverse health effects in response to the abuse of herbal incense products and this abuse is both a public health and safety concern. STRIDE and NFLIS contain 1,529 reports for PB-22 and 1,462 reports for 5F-PB-22 from January through December 2013. Bulk quantities and plant material (herbal incense products) laced with PB-22 and 5F-PB-22 have been encountered. Medical examiner and postmortem toxicology reports demonstrate the involvement of 5F–PB–22 in the death of at least five individuals. UR-144 (TCMP-018; KM-X1) and XLR11 (5-F-UR-144) Various synthetic cannabinoids (e.g., JWH-018, JWH- 073, etc.) laced on plant material have been encountered by law enforcement in recent years. These are promoted under the guise of herbal incense products. These products laced with synthetic cannabinoids are smoked for their psychoactive effects. In response to State and Federal control of these synthetic cannabinoids, a transition to new synthetic cannabinoids laced on plant material has been observed. UR-144 and XLR11 are two such synthetic cannabinoids recently encountered on the designer drug market. UR-144 was first reported in the scientific literature by Frost and colleagues in 2010 as a research tool in the investigation of the cannabinoid system. XLR11 was not previously reported prior to encountering on the designer drug market. There are no commercial or medical uses for these substances. UR-144 and XLR11 have been encountered as adulterants in numerous herbal products that are smoked for their psychoactive effects. Poison control centers continue to report adverse health effects in response to the abuse of herbal incense products and this abuse is both a public health and safety concern. STRIDE and NFLIS contain over 5,200 reports for UR-144 and over 7,200 reports for XLR11 in 2012. Bulk quantities and plant material (herbal incense products) laced with UR-144 and XLR11 have been encountered. (Continued on Next Page) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 23 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Synthetic Cathinones 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (Street Names: MDMA, Ecstasy, XTC, E, X, Beans, Adams) 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) is a synthetic drug possessing both stimulant and mild hallucinogenic properties. On the street it is known as Ecstasy, XTC, E, X, Beans, and Adams. Adolescents and young adults use it to promote euphoria, feelings of closeness, empathy, sexuality, and to reduce inhibitions. It is considered a “party drug” and obtained at “rave” or “techno” parties. However, its abuse has expanded to include other settings outside of the rave scenes, such as a college campus. Abusers are adolescents and young adults. The Monitoring the Future (MTF) study revealed that annual use of ecstasy decreased significantly for 8th, 10th, and 12th graders from 2011 to 2012. For 8th graders, ecstasy use decreased from 1.7% in 2011 to 1.1% in 2012. Annual prevalence of ecstasy use decreased from 4.5% to 3.0% for 10th graders and decreased from 5.3% to 3.8% for 12th grade students. According the 2011 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), there were 14.6 million lifetime users of ecstasy among people age 12 and older. In 2011, there were 2.4 million users of ecstasy in the past year, according to the NSDUH. DAWN ED indicates that there were 22,498 emergency department visit related to MDMA in 2011. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement reports that five deaths in Florida were related to MDMA for January to June 2012. Seized MDMA in the U.S. is primarily manufactured in clandestine laboratories in the Netherlands and Belgium. MDMA destined to the U.S. from the Netherlands is transferred through Germany and Poland and smuggled into the U.S. via body carriers, by air/sea cargo, luggage, and by express mail. Another significant source country is Canada. Operation Candy Box identified an international drug trafficking organization through which up to one million MDMA tablets per month were smuggled into the U.S. A small number of MDMA clandestine laboratories have been identified operating in the U.S. MDMA is mainly distributed in tablet form. Ecstasy tablets most often contain MDMA alone. Many socalled Ecstasy tablets may contain other substances (e.g., MDA, methamphetamine, ketamine, caffeine, amphetamine), either alone or in combination with MDMA. MDMA tablets are sold with logos, creating brand names for users to seek out. MDMA is also distributed in capsules, powder, and liquid forms. Prices for a tablet range from $3 to $45. MDMA is available in every region of the country, principally in large metropolitan areas. Los Angeles, CA; Miami, FL; and New York, NY are the primary market areas for MDMA smuggled into the U.S. from Western European source countries. International traffickers use south Florida as a base of operations for the importation and distribution of MDMA. According to the National Forensic Laboratory Information System (NFLIS) and the System to Retrieve Information from Drug Evidence (STRIDE) data 4,720 exhibits were identified as MDMA in 2012. (Continued on Next Page) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 24 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Synthetic Cathinones (cont.) 4-Methylmethcathinone (Mephedrone) (Street Names: 4-MMC, meow meow, m-CAT, bounce, bubbles, mad cow) bleeding, dilated pupils, seizures, nausea and vomiting. There have been reports of deaths in which mephedrone was either implicated or ruled as the cause of death. According to self-reported drug users, the amounts for snorting mephedrone ranged from 25 to 75 milligrams but for oral administration it ranged from 150 to 250 milligrams. Following oral or nasal ingestions of mephedrone, users report that desired effects occur 15 to 45 minutes after administration. Mephedrone is popular with youths in urban environments with males appearing to use synthetic cathinones more than females. Information also suggests that mephedrone is used by several population groups such as young adults, mid-to-late adolescents, and older adults. Mephedrone is sold over the Internet and at local retail shops where it is promoted as “a research chemical”, “bath salts” or “plant food.” Substances identified by forensic laboratories as mephedrone increased from 10 reports in 2009 to 336 reports in 2011 and then decreased to 60 reports in 2012. Law enforcement officials have encountered mephedrone in 36 states since 2009. 4-Methylmethcathinone (mephedrone) is a designer drug of the phenethylamine class and shares substantial structural similarities with methcathinone (Schedule I). Drugs from this class of compounds are known to produce central nervous system stimulation, psychoactivity and hallucinations. Evidence from law enforcement indicates that the abuse of mephedrone as a recreational substance is widespread and growing. From 2009 to 2011, law enforcement agencies have documented mephedrone seizures throughout the United States. Mephedrone abuse has been associated with toxicity. Several cases of acute toxicity have been reported for the ingestion of mephedrone. Furthermore, deaths have been reported from the abuse of mephedrone. Individuals have presented at emergency departments following exposures to mephedrone. The adverse health effects reported for mephedrone are similar to those seen with other stimulant drugs. Adverse effects reported by abusers of mephedrone include increased heart rate, increased blood pressure, chest pain, agitation, irritability, dizziness, delusions, nose 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe (Street names: N-bomb, Smiles, 25I, 25C, 25B) 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe are three synthetic substances recently encountered on the designer drug market. These substances are sold online and through illicit channels, commonly purported to be illicit hallucinogens such as LSD. 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe target the same 5-HT2A (serotonin) receptor as many other hallucinogens, including Schedule I hallucinogens like LSD, 2C-I, 2C-C, and 2C-B. These substances have been encountered as powders, liquid solutions, laced on edible items, and soaked onto blotter papers. Available data suggests that extremely small amounts of these substances can cause seizures, cardiac and respiratory arrest, and death. 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe were previously investigated as research tools to probe the location of 5-HT2A receptors in the central nervous system of nonhuman mammals. 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe are abused by a variety of delivery methods for their hallucinogenic properties. Some suppliers may purport or mistake these substances to be LSD or other Schedule I hallucinogens. Information on user population in the U.S. is limited, and includes information from law enforcement encounters, emergency departments, medical examiners, and drug user internet forums. Emergency departments continue to publish cases of severe toxicity due to these substances. Reports (Continued on Next Page) DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 25 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Synthetic Cathinones (cont.) 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe (cont.) (Street names: N-bomb, Smiles, 25I, 25C, 25B) contain 849 reports for 25I-NBOMe, 171 reports for 25C-NBOMe, and 24 reports for 25B-NBOMe between June 2011 and June 2013. Bulk quantities of powdered material and blotter paper laced with some combination of 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe have been encountered. from medical examiners and toxicology labs link some combination of 25I-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 25B-NBOMe to the death of at least 19 individuals, aged 15 to 29 years, in the U.S. between March 2012 and August 2013. Federal, state and local forensic laboratories 3,4-Methylenedioxymethcathinone (Methylone) In 2011, there were 1,857 methylone reports. The methylone reports more than doubled to 4,066 in 2012. From January to June 2013, laboratories have already identified 3,976 methylone reports. Methylone has been found in products falsely marketed as research chemicals, plant food, or bath salts. These products are often sold at smoke shops, head shops, convenience stores, adult book stores, and gas stations and can also be purchased on the Internet. Recently, methylone has been identified in law enforcement seizures that were initially suspected to be MDMA and marketed as “Molly.” 3,4-Methylenedioxymethcathinone (methylone) is a designer drug of the phenethylamine class. Methylone is a synthetic cathinone with substantial chemical, structural, and pharmacological similarities to 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy). It is the β-keto analogue of MDMA. Known as Bath salt, bk-MDMA, MDMC, MDMCAT, Explosion, Ease, Molly. Law enforcement has encountered methylone in the United States as well as in several countries including the Netherlands, United Kingdom, Japan, and Sweden. Methylone was first identified by forensic laboratories in 2009, with four drug reports. 3,4-Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) 3,4-Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) is a designer drug of the phenethylamine class. MDPV is structurally related to cathinone, an active alkaloid found in the khat plant, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), methamphetamine, and other schedule I phenethylamines. Street Names are bath salts, Ivory Wave, plant fertilizer, Vanilla Sky, and Energy-1. MDPV, like some other substances in this class, is a central nervous system (CNS) stimulant. MDPV has been identified in a seized product called Ivory Wave. It has been sold as a bath salt in 500 mg packets with the label indicating “for novelty use only” or “not for human consumption” without any instructions for dosage. DEA’s National Forensic Laboratory Information System (NFLIS) indicates that federal, state and local law enforcement officials encountered MDPV in 49 states and the District of Columbia since 2009. The number of MDPV reports increased from two in 2009 to 380 in 2010 and to 3,625 in 2011. In 2012, the number of MDPV reports decreased slightly to 3,377. DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 26 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Sources of Information Interview with Lt. Larry Mullins, Wise County, Va. Sheriff’s Office Interview with Lt. Richard Stallard, Southwest Virginia Drug Task Force DEA-Miami Bulletin “South Florida: Primary Market for New Chinese Synthetic Designer Drug Flakka” DEA-MIA-BUL-126-15, April 2015 Congressional Research Service “Synthetic Drugs: Overview and Issues for Congress” by Lisa Sacco and Kristin Finklea, Aug. 15, 2014 http://cen.acs.org/articles/90/i35/US-Criminalizes-Designer-Drugs.html “US Criminalizes Designer Drugs” Chemical & Engineering News, by Cheryl Hogue, Aug. 27, 2012 http://www.theverge.com/2014/6/3/5775406/alexander-sasha-shulgin-dies-at-88-godfather-of-ecstasy “’Godfather of ecstasy’ Alexander Shulgin dies at 88” The Verge, by Jacob Kastrenakes, June 3, 2014 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/30/magazine/30ECSTASY.html “Dr. Ecstasy” NYT Magazine, by Drake Bennett, Jan. 30, 2005 http://cen.acs.org/articles/90/i34/Dirty-Pictures.html “Dirty Pictures” Chemical & Engineering News, by Jovana Grbic, Aug. 14, 2012 http://www.forbes.com/sites/alicegwalton/2012/03/30/synthetic-marijuana-what-it-is-and-why-it-should-be-banned/ “Why Synthetic Marijuana Is More Toxic To The Brain Than Pot” Forbes.com, by Alice Walton, Aug. 28, 2014 http://www.myfoxal.com/story/28717005/west-al-drug-agents-see-spike-in-spice-overdoses-arrests “West AL drug agents see spike in spice overdoses, arrests” Fox-WBRC, by Melynda Schauer, April 10, 2015 http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2014/03/birmingham_man_sentenced_to_pr_6.html “Birmingham man sentenced to prison for running Spice operation out of Southside apartment” AL.com, by Kent Faulk, March 12, 2014 http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/18/health/new-york-synthetic-marijuana-hospitalizations/ “Rash of hospitalizations in New York state linked to synthetic marijuana” CNN, by Lorenzo Ferrigno, April 18, 2015 http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/article/20131229/NEWS/131229739 “Rise of Spice popularity in Dothan has police busy” Dothan Eagle, by Matt Elofson, Dec. 29, 2013 http://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-abuse/emerging-trends “New Synthetic Cannabinoids—Cloud 9, Mojo, etc.” Posted Nov. 13, 2014 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 27 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Sources of Information http://wreg.com/2015/04/26/hospitals-see-spike-in-synthetic-marijuana-ov%e2%80%8berdoses/ “Hospitals see spike in synthetic marijuana overdoses” CBS, by Ashley Forest, April 26, 2015 “Updated Results From DEA’s Largest-Ever Global Synthetic Drug Takedown Yesterday” DEA Public Affairs, June 26, 2013 Mis-branded synthetic marijuana (cannabinoids), OCDETF cases against James M. Bolin and James P. Bolin, New Lenox, Ill., February 2014. http://www.dea.gov/divisions/no/2015/no042015.shtml “Connecticut Man Sentenced to 1,440 Months in Prison for Conspiracy to Distribute Spice” DEA, April 20, 2015 http://www.myfoxtwincities.com/story/18649853/blaine-man-gets-10-years-in-friends-2c-e-overdose-death “Blaine man gets 10 years in friend’s 2C-E overdose death” KMSP-TV-Minneapolis, by Bill Keller, May 29, 2012 http://www.webmd.com/mental-health/addiction/features/new-black-market-designer-drugs-why-now “New Black Market Designer Drugs: Why Now? 2C-E and other illicit new drugs are a danger to users and a threat to psychedelic research, experts warn” WebMD Feature, by Daniel J. DeNoon http://www.dea.gov/divisions/mia/2014/mia121214.shtml “Fifteen Suspects Entangled in Operation Synthetic Web” DEA Public Information Officer (954) 660-4602, Dec. 12, 2014 http://www.dea.gov/divisions/dal/2014/dal102814.shtml “Federal Jury Convicts Brothers in Synthetic Drug Distribution Conspiracy” DEA Public Information Officer-Dallas Division, Oct. 28, 2014 http://www.dea.gov/divisions/hq/2014/hq050714.shtml “Project Synergy Phase II continues attack on drug networks, sources of supply, global money flow” DEA Public Affairs, (202) 307-7977, May 7, 2014 http://cen.acs.org/articles/93/web/2015/04/Glimpse-Inside-Sophisticated-World-Synthetic.html “A Glimpse Inside The Sophisticated World Of Synthetic Cannabinoids” Chemical and Engineering News, by Bethany Halford, April 10, 2015 http://k2zombiedc.com/zombie-survival-guide/ “K2 Zombie Survival Guide (DC)” http://www.thesunchronicle.com/news/local_news/area-escapes-sting-of-drug-flakka-which-is-affecting-southern/article_ea93d758-f2a0-11e4bb8a-87ef6b3f13de.html “Area escapes sting of drug Flakka, which is affecting Southern states” Sun-Chronicle, by Jim Hand, May 4, 2015 http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/ultra-goer-died-from-synthetic-drug-alpha-pvp-6396603 “Ultra-Goer Died From Synthetic Drug Alpha-PVP” Miami New Times, by Michael Miller, Sept. 25, 2014 http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2015/0430/What-s-flakka-And-why-are-Florida-police-concerned “What’s flakka? And why are Florida police concerned?” Christian Science Monitor, by Curt Anderson-AP, April 30, 2015 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 28 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Sources of Information Upstate NY Poison Center: Hospital and Pre-Hospital Care Provider Alert April 16, 2015 “South Florida: Primary Market for New Chinese Synthetic Designer Drug “Flakka” DEA Bulletin, April 2015 http://www.vice.com/read/florida-authorities-are-cracking-down-on-flakka-smugglers-and-dealers-505 “The DEA Is Cracking Down on Flakka Smugglers and Dealers in Florida” Vice.com, by Francisco Alvarado, May 5, 2015 http://www.ksat.com/content/pns/ksat/news/2015/04/03/new--cheap--highly-addictive-drug-grows-in-popularity.html “New, cheap, highly addictive drug grows in popularity” KSAT.com, April 3, 2015 http://www.timesnews.net/article/9068939/rock-bottom-police-battle-new-illicit-drug-dubbed-gravel “Rock bottom: Police battle new illicit drug dubbed gravel” TimesNews, by Rain Smith, Oct. 22, 2013 http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/article/112347/gravel-drug-turns-up-in-washington-county “Gravel drug turns up in Washington County” Johnson City Press, by Becky Campbell, Nov. 9, 2013 http://www.foxnews.com/health/2015/04/10/doctors-express-concern-over-synthetic-drug-that-can-induce-excited-delirium/ “Doctors express concern over synthetic drug that can induce excited delirium” FoxNews.com, by Melinda Carstensen, April 10, 2015 http://www.forbes.com/sites/robertglatter/2015/04/04/flakka-the-new-drug-you-need-to-know-about/ “Flakka: The New Designer Drug You Need To Know About” Forbes, by Robert Glatter MD, April 4, 2015 http://crimefeed.com/2015/04/flakka-coming-five-facts-lethal-designer-drug-taking-florida/ “Flakka Is Coming: 5 Things You Should Know About Florida’s Frightening New Drug Of Choice” CrimeFeed, April 9, 2015 by Emily Kaiser http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/paranoid-induced-florida-crime-wave-fuelled-flakka-article-1.2177208 “Paranoia-induced Florida crime wave fueled by flakka, a cheap synthetic drug more potent than bath salts (video) New York Daily News, by Jason Molinet, April 8, 2015 http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/04/15/the-backstory-you-really-need-to-know-about-flakka-and-other-synthetic-drugs/ “The Backstory You Really Need To Know About Flakka And Other Synthetic Drugs” Forbes, by David DiSalvo, April 15, 2015 http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2012/06/05/the-straight-dope-on-what-bath-salts-do-to-your-brain-and-why-theyre-dangerous/ “The Straight Dope on What Bath Salts Do to Your Brain and Why They’re Dangerous” Forbes, by David DiSalvo, June 5, 2012 http://www.clickorlando.com/news/florida-man-high-on-flakka-attacked-officer-said-he-was-god-had-sex-with-tree-police-say/32379106 “Florida man high on flakka attacked officer, said he was God, had sex with tree, police say” ClickOrlando.com, by Daniel Dahm, April 15, 2015 DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 29 Regional Organized Crime Information Center Special Research Report • Synthetic Drugs Sources of Information http://qz.com/384840/flakka-floridas-latest-drug-scourge-can-easily-be-purchased-online-in-china/ “Flakka, Florida’s latest drug scourge, can easily be purchased online in China” Quartz, by Heather Timmons, April 16, 2015 http://www.techtimes.com/articles/44271/20150405/new-designer-drug-flakka-promises-excited-delirium-users-headache-parents.htm “New Designer Drug Flakka Promises ‘Excited Delirium’ For Users And Headache For Parents And Police” TechTimes, by James Maynard, April 5, 2015 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22108839 National Center for Biotechnology Information J.M. Prosser, Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, March 2012 http://www.syracuse.com/health/index.ssf/2015/05/synthetic_pot_outbreak_sends_179_to_hospitals_mostly_in_onondaga_county.html “CNY synthetic pot outbreak sends 179 to hospitals” Syracuse.com, by James Mulder, May 5, 2015 http://www.thepoisonreview.com/2015/04/18/27-laboratory-confirmed-fatalities-from-pmma-dr-death/ “27 fatalities from laboratory-confirmed exposure to PMMA (Dr. Death)” Poison Review, April 18, 2015 http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/suppl/2015/03/04/3.1.E83.DC1/2014-0070-appendix_2.pdf PMA/PMMA FAQ Factsheet http://www.dea.gov/divisions/hq/2015/hq031815.shtml “DEA Issues Nationwide Alert on Fentanyl as Threat to Health and Public Safety” DEA Public Affairs (202) 307-7977, March 18, 2015 http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/04/07/mississippi-spice-overdoses/25428467/ “Investigators: Mississippi spice overdoses linked” USA Today, by Therese Apel, April 7, 2015 http://nymag.com/news/features/synthetic-drugs-2013-4/ “Travels in the New Psychedelic Bazaar” New York Magazine, by Vanessa Grigoriadis, April 7, 2013 This Special Research Report was supported by Grant No. 2014-RS-CX-0008, awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. The Office of Justice Programs also coordinates the activities of the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency, and the Office for Victims of Crime. Points of view or opinions in this document are those of the author and do not represent the official position of ROCIC or the United States Department of Justice. DISSEMINATION RESTRICTED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT 30