Pubdate: Fri, 29 Apr 2011
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wsj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
Author: Sean Gardiner

'BATH SALTS' CRACKDOWN

State Targets Vendors Selling Drug

New Jersey store owners who have been peddling a designer
hallucinogenic drug labeled as bath salts and plant food have 10 days
to voluntarily surrender them or face criminal consequences, according
to New Jersey Attorney General Paula Dow.

On Thursday, Ms. Dow set a May 18 deadline for storeowners who have
been selling the drugs to surrender them or be at risk for arrest on
charges of distribution, sale or possession of drugs.

The drugs-packaged under names such as "Energizing Aromatherapy,"
"Ivory Wave" and "Vanilla Sky"-were placed on the state's Controlled
Dangerous Substance list on Wednesday. The penalty for possession of
these designer drugs now is three to five years imprisonment and a
fine of up to $25,000, Ms. Dow said.

The drugs came to state legislators' attention in March when a
22-year-old Rutgers student named William Parisio is alleged to have
murdered his 22-year-old girlfriend, Pamela Schmidt, of Warren
Township, in his parent's Cranford home. Mr. Parisio's mother told The
Wall Street Journal that in addition to mental-health issues, her son
had been using the "bath salts" as well as other drugs.

Ms. Dow said the designer drugs, which can contain one or more of
several different kinds of amphetamine-like chemicals, have been most
commonly sold in gas stations and smoke shops. The psychological
effects include hallucinations, delusional thinking, anxiety and
paranoia, she said. The physical effects include dramatically
increasing blood pressure and heart rates, she said.

The New Jersey Poison Information and Education System has received 23
reports of the use of designer drugs labeled as bath salts this year.
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