Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jul 2010
Source: Colorado Springs Independent (CO)
Copyright: 2010 Colorado Springs Independent
Contact:  http://www.csindy.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1536
Author: J. Adrian Stanley

INCENSE NONSENSE

Anyone Can Buy A New And Little-Understood Drug Called K2 - Even Your Kids

The kid (and he does look young) behind the counter at Freakys knows 
exactly what I'm asking for.

He smirks a little in the dim light of the Colorado Springs head shop 
- - perhaps I don't look the part - and points past the hand-blown 
glass pipes, bubblers and bongs, to what appears to be single-serving 
packages of soy sauce and sports drink mix.

This, apparently, is the "incense" selection.

"Is this stuff pretty popular?" I ask.

Uh, yeah.

"Don't people smoke this?"

I raise my eyebrow and throw the kid a knowing grin. He takes a step 
back from the counter and stares at his shoes, grinning sheepishly.

Uh, yeah. But they're not supposed to. It's illegal to misuse the 
incense, he tells me. (Actually, it isn't in Colorado. But no matter.)

He hands me one of the plastic packets. It's marked with an image of 
a Colorado license plate with the words "Colorado Chronic" emblazoned 
across the front. Huh.

"How much is this?"

$21.48. For 1.7 grams. Of incense.

I pay the kid the money.

Back at the office, we tear open the pouch. The contents look a 
little like crushed marijuana bud from a distance, but up close 
they're clearly tiny, dried leaves of some plant. The stuff smells 
sort of fantastic.

My boss calls it "lemony." My other boss detects hints of fennel. A 
co-worker is reminded of fine tobacco. I think the stuff smells like 
chamomile and honey.

We stare at it. Prod it.

But we don't smoke it.

Earning the hype?

On March 4, Newsweek ran an article called "Fake-Pot Panic" that 
mocked "breathless news reports" across the nation about a newish, 
little-understood, and mostly legal drug that's often known by the 
brand name K2.

"Maybe you even caught a Missouri detective's panicked prediction 
that K2 is 'going to end up killing somebody,'" the article chided. 
"As far as we know, though, it hasn't. Why is it suddenly getting all 
this attention?"

Three months later, David Rozga, an Iowa 18-year-old, smoked K2, 
became delusional and anxious, and shot himself to death.

The good-looking, amicable boy, who loved playing music in church and 
was a huge fan of the Green Bay Packers, was planning to attend the 
University of Northern Iowa starting in August. According to the Des 
Moines Register, a panicked Rozga told a friend he was "going to 
hell" before he headed home and ended his life on June 6.

For now, we'll set that aside and preserve the spirit of Newsweek's 
question. Why is this suddenly getting all this attention?

Well, first, it appears to be getting a lot more popular. Last year, 
poison control centers across the country got a grand total of 13 
calls about K2. As of July 19, this year there have been 724 calls 
coming from 47 states.

Second, no one knows all the ingredients in K2. It's not a natural 
product; the herbs in it get sprayed with chemicals - apparently 
manufactured in China, Europe and the Cayman Islands - and then are 
sold as incense. Yes, many people report smoking K2 and having an 
innocuous high, much like what pot provides. But the type of high 
experienced depends on how the body reacts to whatever chemicals are 
in this unregulated and untested product. And several have been found.

Finally, there's this little issue: A 15-year-can't buy alcohol, he 
can't buy cigarettes, he can't even get into an R-rated movie without 
parental permission. But he can walk into a store - we found five 
that sell it in five minutes worth of phone calls - and buy K2, a 
drug that might put his life in danger.

"We had a 15-year-old that was going to jump out of a fifth-story 
window because he thought it was something else," Dr. Anthony Scalzo 
says. "It's only a matter of time."

Scalzo, a toxicologist at Saint Louis University in Missouri, directs 
the Missouri Regional Poison Control Center at SSM Cardinal Glennon 
Children's Medical Center and is considered a leading expert on K2. 
He's seen the results of the K2 craze, which has hit the Midwest 
particularly hard, and the doctor says the symptoms his patients are 
experiencing are troubling. Sky-high heart rates are common, and he's 
seen patients' blood pressure as high as 200/106 (well into stage 2 
hypertension). K2 users have also had hallucinations, paranoia, 
fever, tremors and intense anxiety. In fact, some patients have 
required several doses of anxiety medication to control their 
symptoms, and one panicked woman complained that she couldn't move her body.

About a year ago, when Scalzo first began fielding calls about bad 
highs on K2, the callers were usually teenage boys and young men. 
Now, there's no one demographic. The aging yuppie looking to relive 
her '60s doping days is just as likely to pick up a pouch as an 
experimenting teenager.

"The typical story we get is, 'We bought it at the Ace gas station or 
the bait and tackle shop," Scalzo says. "And we thought it was a safe 
alternative."

Smoke and mirrors

K2. Spice. Colorado Chronic. Black Mamba. Fake Weed. Genie. Voodoo. 
Zohai. FIYA. Blaze. RedXDawn.

A dose by any of these names is, well .... no one's quite sure, 
actually. This stuff isn't regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug 
Administration, and there's no standards applied to its production. 
Anything could be in there.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency says it's found that those packets 
usually contain "unknown plant materials that have been laced with 
trace to low amounts of HU-210, CP-47,497, and/or JWH-018." (It 
states that other drugs may be used in the products as well.) Here's 
a brief rundown of those chemicals:

. HU-210 was created by scientists at the Hebrew University in Israel 
around 1988 for experimental purposes, according to the DEA. It's 100 
to 800 times as potent as THC (tetrahydrocannabinol, the part of pot 
that gets you high).

. The DEA says JWH-018 was invented by researchers at a university in 
South Carolina around 1975 for experimental purposes, though all 
other reports say it was invented in the mid-'90s by organic chemist 
John W. Huffman at South Carolina's Clemson University. It's four to 
five times as potent as THC.

. The DEA didn't provide a description of CP-47,497. But Calvina Fay, 
executive director of the Drug Free America Foundation and Save our 
Society From Drugs, wrote in a March CNN opinion article that it was 
created by a drug company in the 1980s for research purposes. It is, 
she says, 3 to 28 times as potent as THC.

Mike Turner, a special agent with the DEA's Denver branch, says the 
DEA considers K2 "a drug of concern," though it has thus far not 
pushed to outlaw it. Right now, the DEA is just trying to collect 
data on what's in K2 and how dangerous it is.

"No matter what we think is in there, unless it's analyzed, you don't 
know what you're ingesting or what strength it is, and we're seeing 
in some parts of the country, kids are having to be hospitalized," he 
says. "[Parents should] make sure their kids know that this is 
definitely not something for [them] to play around with."

A scientific essay, "Spice: A never ending story?" had similar 
observations. Published in 2009 in Forensic Science International, 
following Germany's ban of K2, it states:

"The producers use chemicals with likely psychoactive properties but 
without any knowledge of clinical data or hazardous consequences for 
the consumer. All compounds introduced into the market, lack any 
published in vivo testing even in animal models. Only limited data on 
the pharmacological and cannabimimetic properties of CP 47,497 in 
animal models and the metabolism of JWH-015 in rat liver microsomes 
are available."

Dr. Alvin Bronstein, medical director of the Denver-based Rocky 
Mountain Poison and Drug Center, says he's worried about the effects 
of the active ingredients of K2, but he's also concerned about the 
inactive ingredients - the mysterious plant material.

"I don't think people realize that they're inhaling different herbs 
and flavorings that were never meant to be inhaled in this manner," 
he says. "I don't know what it's going to do long-term to people's lungs."

And what's actually in K2 may not be the only problem. Dr. Bob 
Melamede, a microbiology professor at the University of Colorado at 
Colorado Springs and founder of Cannabis Science, a biotech company 
that develops pharmaceutical cannabis products, says what's not in K2 
could also be an issue. In marijuana, he explains, many chemicals are 
present, and they have complex interactions in the body, giving the 
user distinct effects, such as calmness or hunger. By comparison, 
drugs like K2 only mimic a single part of marijuana - THC - so the 
body's reaction is likely to be different, which may be why K2 users 
are sometimes very anxious.

"Pot is, in general, safer and more broad-acting," Melamede explains. 
"The plant is not simply THC, it happens to be a whole composite of chemicals."

While K2 - or Spice as it was first commonly known - remains legal 
throughout most of the United States (where it showed up years ago), 
it is now banned through much of Europe and is also illegal in a 
smattering of U.S. counties and municipalities. North Dakota, Kansas, 
Louisiana, Tennessee, Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri and Alabama have 
laws or pending laws banning it, and other states are working on 
outlawing it, including Iowa, where Rozga died.

Interestingly, around 20 states - Colorado included - already outlaw 
cannabis synthetics. Bryan Gogarty, a prosecutor at the 4th Judicial 
District Attorney's Office, explains those laws don't affect K2, 
because, while the new drug mimics THC, it isn't similar enough to it 
on a molecular level to be covered by existing law.

Buy locally?

Colorado Springs police spokesman Sgt. Steve Noblitt had never heard 
of K2 before my call.

He's not alone. The name "K2" didn't immediately ring any bells with 
District Attorney Dan May, either (though clearly Gogarty, one of his 
prosecutors, knew what it was). Spokespersons for Memorial and 
Penrose-St. Francis hospitals checked with their emergency room 
staffs for this story; none had heard of K2. Teri Lawrence, 
supervisor for El Paso County Community Detox Facility, said she'd 
yet to have a patient admit to using K2. Likewise, Jennifer Rivera, a 
therapist and executive director of the El Paso and Teller Counties 
Alliance for Drug Endangered Children, didn't know a thing about K2.

But Rivera's teenage son did. When asked, the boy purportedly told 
his mom, "It really messes kids up."

And here, a pattern seems to emerge. The people society views as 
"helpers" - law enforcement, treatment programs, medical 
professionals, parents - seem largely unaware of K2 in the Springs. 
It's the shop owners, teenagers and drug users who treat it like 
yesterday's news. (According to some sources, K2 is also popular with 
military personnel who must undergo regular drug tests. Fort Carson 
representatives did not return Indy phone calls or e-mails seeking 
comment - but some branches of the military, including the Air Force, 
have prohibited K2.)

Adam Leech, owner of vintage shop the Leechpit and an Indy columnist, 
says he was confused at first when people started calling his shop 
asking if he carried "spice." He doesn't. But the calls keep coming.

Kathi Matthews, director of Pikes Peak Behavioral Health Group's 
Adult Substance Abuse Program, says she doesn't know a lot about K2. 
But her patients sure seem to know what it is.

"We've had some discussion about it in group, because group members 
have brought it up," she says.

All of which may lend credence to a statement that detox's Lawrence 
made: "Just because we haven't heard of it doesn't mean it's not out 
there and becoming an epidemic problem in our community."

Of course, no one knows that better than Michael Rozga. He talked to 
his late son David about everything he knew of that could hurt him. 
But he didn't know to warn his son about K2. And now he's worried 
that other unsuspecting parents across the country may wake up to the 
nightmare he's now facing - losing a child to a drug they've never heard of.

"How do you talk to them about something you know nothing about?" he asks.

Cat and mouse

It would seem that the solution to the K2 issue is easy: Outlaw it.

Laws banning K2 have a way of flying through governmental bureaucracy 
at record speed. As one can imagine, there just isn't political will 
to defend $30 "incense" that sends kids to hospitals.

But, wait, there is one little problem.

Remember that scientific study from Forensic Science International? 
That article came out shortly after Germany banned the chemicals in 
K2. And it noted the following: "Our analysis demonstrated that just 
4 weeks after the prohibition took effect a multitude of second 
generation products were flooding the market. The speed of 
introduction of new products and the use of JWH-073 as a substitute 
for JWH-018 not only showed that the producers are well aware of the 
legal frameworks, but that they likely anticipated the prohibition 
and already had an array of replacement products on hand."

Outlaw one drug, and another one pops up to replace it. Just like that.

Kansas was one of the first states to ban K2's chemicals. Its laws 
went into effect four months ago, on March 18. On March 11, Wichita's 
KWCH-TV reported "shops that sold K2 are ready with something new."

According to the news report, the replacement drug mirrored K2 almost 
precisely, but was derived from the South African Canna plant and was legal.

So what's the solution? Well, people like Melamede and the 
like-minded Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National 
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), will tell you 
that the solution is simply to make pot legal - eliminating the 
market for replacement drugs that doctors like Scalzo and Bronstein 
believe are more dangerous than the natural stuff.

"The appeal [of K2] is that it's not illegal," St. Pierre says.

Others, however, think there's merit in simply making dangerous drugs 
illegal as they arise and trying to educate people on the hazards of 
abusing drugs. The DEA's Turner says that if a national law went into 
place banning K2, it would outlaw certain chemicals found in the 
product, as well as their close cousins - meaning it might be a bit 
of a challenge to get copycat products on the shelf. (Molecularly 
dissimilar products that had the same effects, however, would still be legal.)

And yet, this constant need to ban ever-new designer drugs - what 
Scalzo describes as a "cat-and-mouse game" - might be a losing 
battle. After all, these days huge numbers of kids are abusing drugs 
they pull out of the cupboard or medicine drawer of their own homes, 
everything from pain pills to glue. And the drug most people still 
consider one of the worst of this generation - methamphetamine - is 
often made from items that can be purchased at any drug store.

The simple truth is: You can't ban everything. Even a DEA agent knows that.

"You just hope," Turner says with a sigh, "that these kids can get 
past a certain age without trying some of this stuff."
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart