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Synthetic Cannabinoids and Stimulants Outlawed

May 30, 2011 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

The Minnesota Legislature passed and the Governor signed into law a bill that will make illegal possession of most of the synthetic cannabinoid products like K2 and Spice, as well as many of the synthetic stimulants products sold as “bath salts” and synthetic stimulants 2CE and 2CI.

Many of these products along with their analogs will be illegal as of July 1st.

See the wording at:

https://www.revisor.mn.gov/laws/?id=53&year=2011&type=0

 

Erik Ainge Personal Story

March 28, 2011 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

WELLESLEY, Mass. — New York Jets backup quarterback Erik Ainge started using drugs when he was 12. It began with a bong hit, and it escalated from marijuana to prescription meds, alcohol, cocaine and heroin. By his senior year at Tennessee, he was addicted to painkillers, downing them by the handful.

 Matthew Muise for ESPNNewYork.comErik Ainge told his story to ESPN NewYork to help others like him.

This is the story of a professional athlete who lost control. Ainge fell into a self-destructive lifestyle that included multiple overdoses, drunk driving, extended stays in rehab and relapses, leaving his football career in shambles.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Ainge, the nephew of former basketball star and current Celtics GM Danny Ainge, started for Tennessee and became a fifth-round pick of the Jets in 2008. He wanted to do right by the family name, synonymous with success and clean living, but his behavior can be best described by the large tattoo on his back:

“Crazy White Boy.”

Sadly, he has no recollection of getting that tattoo.

Ainge, 24, who also suffers from bipolar disorder, missed the entire 2010 season because he went on a two-week bender before training camp and landed in rehab, fearing for his life. That was almost nine months ago. He has remained clean since July 17, he said — his longest stretch of sobriety since he was 11.

Trying to help others by raising awareness of addiction and mental illness, Ainge recounted his painful journey in an interview with ESPNNewYork.com.

His life, his words.

I’m a drug addict. I was in denial for a long time, but that’s who I am. My addiction is with the hardest of hard drugs — heroin, cocaine and alcohol. During my days of using, I was a really bad drug addict. I would’ve made Charlie Sheen look like Miss Daisy.

I always thought of myself as a good kid that liked to have fun. We use the term “rationalization” in therapy. I would rationalize my drug use, and make it seem a lot more normal than it was. But it wasn’t, because I was using a lot of drugs at a young age.

It got worse in high school and even worse in college. By the time I was a senior in college, I was an addict. I played my whole senior season with a broken finger on my throwing hand. It was really badly broken. Just taking the snap, throwing the ball, handing it off, getting tackled — everything that goes along with playing quarterback — it was very painful.

[+] Enlarge

Jerome Davis/Icon SMIAinge said his addiction to painkillers went from bad to worse when he made the transition from Tennessee to the New York Jets.

Throughout that process, I became hooked on pain killers. I got them from the team doctor. I went through the prescriptions pretty fast. After he had been giving them to me for quite a while, he said he couldn’t give them to me anymore.

I was hooked on them and I was playing football, and there was no way I was going to cancel my senior year by going to rehab. I started getting them from people, buying them, getting them off the street. I wasn’t the only player on the team that was doing it, so we knew people. It wasn’t, like, super sketchy or anything. We knew people who had them, and we were Tennessee football players, so they pretty much just gave them to us.

[When contacted by ESPNNewYork.com, a spokesman for the Tennessee football program declined to comment on Ainge's story of his time in Knoxville.]

After a point, it got so bad that I was in the throes of addiction pretty quickly. That led to … one drug to the next drug to the next drug. Then I moved up to New York with a bunch of money, and it was where everything started falling apart.

My drug problem went from bad to worse. My rookie year, I failed a drug test for taking Adderall and got suspended four games. Adderall is like Ritalin, an amphetamine. I started taking Adderall back in high school, just to stay awake — a lot of kids take it.

But most of my rookie year, it was painkillers — and lots of them. I was taking 25 Percocets at a time. Five hours later, I’d do it again. Another eight hours, and I’d do it again. A drug dealer, a guy I knew, had them. There were other social, party drugs I would do, but I was addicted to painkillers.

I had a really bad stress fracture in my foot, but I think the reason it got so bad was because I was using so many drugs. I had no idea what was going on with my foot; I was completely out of it.

I was under the influence pretty much every day, every practice. I mean, I was a drug addict, so it’s not like I stopped using drugs for any reason. Did the Jets know? I don’t know. That’s all they knew me as. I was a drug addict from the first day I stepped foot on the Hofstra campus [site of the team's training base until 2009].

The first scientific study of prescription painkiller use by retired NFL players shows higher rates of misuse than that of the general population, possibly due to use during playing days.

A few of my teammates knew, but it wasn’t their business to tell anybody. They left it up to me. [Punter] Steve Weatherford helped me the most. He’s my best friend on the team, and he encouraged me to get help when my drinking got out of control. He’s a guy I partied with, but he was always under control and I always got out of control. He tried to comfort me, saying things like, “Let’s do some sober, fun things.”

I disappeared in the spring of ’09. I was at the McLean detox center [in Belmont, Mass.], in rehab for more than a month. By that point, my drug problem had gotten so bad that I think pretty much everybody knew something was going on. I told the Jets’ higher-ups where I was going.

If I hadn’t gone to get that help, I really think my job would’ve been in jeopardy. That wasn’t necessarily the reason I went to rehab, but I was pushing my luck with the Jets. I would miss appointments with Coach Cav [quarterbacks coach Matt Cavanaugh], who was taking his own free time to teach me. I missed workouts like I was a 10-year veteran, and that’s not my style. I’m a hardworking person, but my drug problem had gotten so bad that my work started to suffer.

I got out of rehab and I lasted three or four months, but I started drinking, socially. About four months after I started drinking, I was a hard-core alcoholic. I thought I was a drug addict and didn’t have an alcohol problem. I didn’t listen to what the people were telling me in my Narcotics Anonymous meetings. They said alcohol is a drug, and I just didn’t listen to them.

Throughout my drinking days, I made some big mistakes. I was driving under the influence almost every night, so I moved into a place I couldn’t afford just because it was closer to the bars [in Morristown, N.J.] — and it was a nice place to bring women.

I don’t feel lucky that I never hurt myself; that was never a big concern. The big concern was that I’d get in an accident and hurt somebody else. If I hurt somebody driving under the influence, I don’t think I would’ve been able to live with myself.

Did I ever think about killing myself? Let’s put it this way: I’ve overdosed several times and had to be taken to the hospital. I don’t know if you’d call that suicidal or not, but any time you overdose on drugs, you have to step back and think about why that’s happening. The last time it happened was before I went to rehab the first time [in 2009]. It was heroin.

At that point, I was using a lot of heroin. You talk about an expensive habit. I remember I used to go to the ATM and take out hundreds of dollars at a time. Fortunately, I never had to steal — that’s very common for addicts — but I lied to people and destroyed relationships.

I made a lot of poor life decisions. I got a roommate, a friend from back home in Oregon — big mistake. He moved in with me [in New Jersey], and he was a really bad influence. Between the two of us, we were sleeping with a lot of women from the clubs and bars, and it was a recipe for disaster.

I was getting drug-tested three or four times a week [by the NFL], but I continued to drink daily through the spring of 2010 and into the summer. That’s when I relapsed with hard drugs. In July, I went on a two-week bender.

I went to Tennessee to visit friends, and I had some trouble with the law. It never got reported because the cops were Tennessee fans, and they saw how bad a shape I was in. It was so bad that I don’t even want to talk about it. I was cuffed, but instead of busting me, the cops called somebody in town that knew me.

Two days later, I was up in Boston at rehab. I had to get help before I died.


I went to two different rehab centers in the Boston area, and a halfway house — a total of almost four months as an inpatient. I was able to remain clean the whole time. The first few weeks were kind of like nails on a chalkboard for me, but I stuck it out.

For the first time, I was prescribed bipolar medication, which seems to be working. I have what’s called rapid cycling bipolar disorder, so I’m up and down and all over the place even when I’m on my medication. That’s a daily battle in itself. That was diagnosed by doctors in ’09. I’ve had it for a long time, but I never told anybody about it.

I’ve had problems since high school, being manic and being very depressed. I’d get manic a lot and go get tattoos. Suffice it to say that I have a lot of tattoos — big ones, in fact. The most recent one I got says “Crazy White Boy” in huge letters across my back. I wasn’t under the influence, but I don’t even remember getting the tattoo.

The Road Ahead

WELLESLEY, Mass. — What’s next for Erik Ainge? The backup QB, who spent last season on the reserve/did not report list, remains the property of the New York Jets, per the four-year, $1.9M contract he signed as a rookie. Realistically, it’s a long shot that he’ll ever suit up for them again. The Jets declined to comment on Ainge’s future.

Citing the confidentiality of the league’s steroid and substance-abuse policy, the Jets also wouldn’t comment on any aspect of Ainge’s drug and alcohol abuse. They wouldn’t say whether they have attempted to reach out to him since he was released from rehab this past fall.

Ainge said he hasn’t given much thought to what he’ll do if his football career is over. “I love sports, so it would be hard for me to do something not sports-related,” he said. “But I’m not at that stage yet. If I project too much into the future, all that does is cause problems.”

Ainge said the lockout has impacted his aftercare because he can’t secure insurance through the league to cover his therapy sessions. He said he called the league and was told that, because he was in the substance-abuse program, he couldn’t continue to receive medical coverage.

Every player has the opportunity to receive insurance without interruption through COBRA, a league spokesman said. If a player exercises his COBRA rights by mid-May, he will experience no break in coverage and any treatment he receives before his election will be covered, according to the spokesman.

A player also can use his league-funded health reimbursement account, if he has one, to pay the costly insurance premiums. Once a player is vested with three credited seasons, the league puts $75,000 into the HRA account.

But Ainge has only two credited seasons; he didn’t get credit for last season because he was in drug rehab and didn’t report.

– Rich Cimini

It gets easier over time. The first three months were harder than the next three months. I’m doing better now, but it’s still very tough. When you get in bad moods or when a friend says something that hurts your feelings, my initial reaction has always been to use more drugs and numb the pain and block out what’s really going on in my life.

I don’t have my No. 1 coping mechanism anymore. I’m doing all this sober and I’m dealing with it like a normal person, and I’m just not used to that. It’s been tough. I created a lot of problems for myself throughout my drinking and using days. I’m suffering the consequences now, and I have to do all that sober.

I learned how to be more spiritual than I was before. When you’re laying there and you’re sick and you’re throwing up and you’re all alone, it’s easier to reach out to God than it was before. That has helped me out through the recovery process.

A normal day for me consists of therapy with my psychiatrist and/or NA or AA meetings. Five nights a week, I go to meetings. I had four recovery groups, but I can’t afford them anymore because of the NFL lockout.

The lockout has caused a lot of problems for me. My substance-abuse insurance through the NFL and CIGNA got canceled as a result of the lockout. If I were a normal player — let’s say I had a broken leg and I was in the hospital — they’d have forms they would’ve sent me to continue receiving insurance through the NFL. Since I’m a drug addict in the drug program, my insurance just got canceled, and I didn’t like that.

My family has been great. When I went back to rehab, some of them were like, “Here we go again.” But they never gave up on me. My uncle Danny took me in from the halfway house to live with his family until I decide on what to do from here, which has been huge. He’s someone I look up to. When I was a kid, he and Dan Majerle [former Phoenix Suns teammates] used to wear rubber bands on their wrist. They used to give them to me when they couldn’t wear them anymore.

At 24, I still wear those rubber bands on my wrist. My uncle has been a pretty big influence on me, especially from a spiritual standpoint. He’s the bishop at the Mormon Church in Wellesley, Mass. I see what kind of man he is, and that’s what I want to be someday. Danny Ainge will always be a positive name, but I can make Erik Ainge a positive name again if I make the right decisions from here on out.

As far as my future in football, it remains uncertain. After eight months, I’m just trying to stay clean and be a better person. It’s not like I’m fine and I’m cured and I’m ready to go, gung-ho, back at it. I want this to be the last time that I ever have to try to get clean, and I’m going slowly.

I still have a lot of work to do, but I am proud of being eight months sober. I’ve never been sober or clean for this long since I was 11. The best part is being able to help other people. That makes it easier for me to stay clean, knowing I can help other people. I’ve been going to some high schools in the Boston area, telling my story and relaying my message. If I can help one kid, it would be worth it.

I’m showing people that love me that I am changing for the better through my actions, and I’m starting to make amends to those people I’ve wronged. The Jets will be one of those people because I wasn’t trustworthy. I should’ve been there for them, and I wasn’t. It’s a long, hard process, asking for forgiveness, but I plan on doing it — for them and for myself.

The reason I decided to speak so openly about this is because I want to bring awareness to mental health and the disease of addiction. Kids and athletes need to know it’s OK to ask for help and to talk to somebody about what’s going on in their lives. I was afraid to talk before, but through my NA program and God, I’m not afraid to ask for help or talk openly anymore.

I still have fear, but I’m not afraid.

Erik Ainge

 

Senators Introduce Bill to Ban the Chemicals in K2

March 24, 2011 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), and Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) recently introduced bipartisan legislation to ban the chemicals commonly used in synthetic marijuana often referred to as “K2″ or “Spice,” among other names.

“People are buying this drug so easily at the local mall or online that they think it’s safe,” Grassley said in a news release. “The marketing is deceptive and the product is readily available, which both make the drug seem harmless. It’s anything but harmless. People including a young Iowan have died or been seriously injured because of this product. Congress needs to permanently control the substances used in this drug so no more lives are lost.”

The legislation, called the Dangerous Synthetic Drug Control Act of 2011 and the David Mitchell Rozga Act, is named for the 18-year-old from in Iowa who took his own life soon after using K2 purchased from his local shopping mall.

Hatch said the drug has been problematic in every state. “With impressionable youth and young adults in Utah and across the nation abusing ‘Spice’ and other synthetic drugs, it is important to head off this fast-growing epidemic with legislation that permanently bans the chemicals in these synthetic drugs that are wreaking such havoc in so many lives,” he said.

Fifteen states have already acted to ban the sale and possession of the chemical compounds found in these products. Yesterday, Virginia’s governor signed into law a ban on the products as well as legislation criminalizing its sale and possession. Both measures take effect immediately.

Many counties and communities, especially communities around military installations, throughout the country also have proposed bans or are in the process of banning these products. The Drug Enforcement Administration has banned five chemicals found in K2. However, this ban will last only for one year with an option to extend the ban for an additional six months. There is no guarantee that the chemicals will be banned permanently in the timeframe allowed.

A special concern for Hagan is the service members using K2.

“Military installation commanders from across North Carolina want the chemicals in these drugs banned. It is critical to the well being, safety and mission readiness of our troops,” she said in a statement.

The legislation introduced by the senators would impose a permanent ban on the five chemicals initially banned by the Drug Enforcement Administration, plus additional chemicals, used to make the drug. The legislation would treat K2 like other banned narcotics.

“Synthetic marijuana poses a serious health risk – with an escalating number of thousands of calls into poison control centers around the country. The DEA needs to have the authority to quickly withdraw dangerous substances from store shelves as soon as they emerge as a public health threat,” Feinstein concluded.
 

 

Minn. Legislature prepares to ban synthetic pot

February 25, 2011 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

Minn. Legislature prepares to ban synthetic pot
ERIC ROPER, Star Tribune

The Minnesota Legislature is preparing to send synthetic marijuana up in smoke.

The House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to outlaw the potent substance, a mixture of specially treated herbs and spices that simulates the effects of smoking marijuana. Commonly sold as incense in head shops, synthetic marijuana has grown popular in recent years under brand names like “K2″ and “Spice.”

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) announced plans last year to make synthetic marijuana temporarily illegal under federal law. An agency spokesman said that ban is expected to go into effect soon.

Rep. John Kriesel, the sponsor of the Minnesota bill, called synthetic marijuana a dangerous “phenomenon [that] has swept across the nation and our great state,” particularly among teenagers. His bill makes it a gross misdemeanor to sell synthetic marijuana and a misdemeanor to possess it.

“This bill will undoubtedly make our communities a safer place to live,” said Kriesel, R-Cottage Grove. A companion bill has been introduced in the Senate and awaits a hearing.

At the Last Place on Earth head shop in Duluth, owner Jim Carlson claims he sells more than a million dollars’ worth of synthetic marijuana a year.

Carlson sued Duluth when it became the first city in Minnesota to ban the substance, although the ordinance was not enforced because it was too vague. He and several other Minnesota head shops later banded together to sue the DEA, arguing their temporary ban is unconstitutional.

“You wonder why are they [trying to ban] the mellower, milder stuff when there’s so much other stuff out there they could be wasting their time with,” said Carlson, who plans to sue the state if Kriesel’s bill becomes law. He noted that his shop does not sell synthetic marijuana to minors.

Kriesel’s bill comes on the heels of similar legislation last year outlawing salvia divinorum, which went into effect Aug. 1.

Eric Roper • 651-222-1210

 

K2/Spice is Highlighted on Fox 9 NEWS

January 27, 2011 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

K2, bath soaps getting kids high over the counter

Updated: Thursday, 27 Jan 2011, 12:06 PM CST Published : Thursday, 27 Jan 2011, 12:05 PM CST by Tom Lyden / FOX 9 News

MINNEAPOLIS – A health warning: parents need to know about non-traditional ways your kids are getting high, and they come with dangerous consequences.

An awful lot of this is happening online. Making it very difficult to regulate. Essentially, what’s happening in laboratories around the world is people are taking chemicals they know get you high, tinkering with them slightly, making what’s known as chemical analogs. That’ll still get you high, and are also perfectly legal in many states. Parents may be in the dark on this. Their kids, are not.

See the full story at:

http://www.myfoxtwincities.com/dpp/news/Kids-Rampantly-Abusing-Synthetic-Drugs-K2-bath-salts-jan-26-2011

 

Synthetic Marijuana Becomes Illegal

December 2, 2010 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

The Drug Enforcement Agency has taken emergency action to outlaw five chemicals (JWH-018, JWH-073, JWH-200, CP-47,497, and cannabicyclohexanol) that are used to make synthetic marijuana, meaning it will be illegal to possess or sell them in the U.S. for at least one year.

The chemicals used to make “fake pot” products, known by a number of different names such as K2 and Spice, will be studied by the Department of Health and Human Services to determine whether the chemicals and the products should be permanently controlled, the DEA said in a statement.

After no fewer than 30 days, DEA will publish in the Federal Register a “Final Rule to Temporarily Control” these chemicals for at least 12 months with the possibility of a six-month extension. They will be designated as Schedule I substances, the most restrictive category, which is reserved for unsafe, highly abused substances with no medical usage.

During the past year, herbal blends marketed as “incense” and as being “legal” for a marijuana-like high, have become increasingly popular. These products consist of plant material that has been coated with research chemicals that mimic THC and are sold at a variety of retail outlets, in head shops and on the internet.

The DEA has received an increasing number of reports from coalitions, poison centers, hospitals and law enforcement officials regarding these products.

Fifteen states have already taken action to control one or more of these chemicals. Alabama was one of these states. Deborah Soule, Executive Director of Alabama’s Partnership for a Drug-Free Community, whose coalition worked on a state-wide ban, said having a DEA agent as part of their coalition helped their cause.

“The DEA’s action is evident of an outcome to what coalitions can do,” she said.

http://www.cadca.org/resources/detail/synthetic-marijuana-becomes-illegal

K2 Summit

 

DEA outlaws chemicals used to make synthetic marijuana

November 24, 2010 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition 1 Comment »

“The DEA has taken emergency action to outlaw chemicals used to make synthetic marijuana, meaning it will be illegal to possess or sell them in the U.S. for at least one year, until further action is taken.

The chemicals used to make “fake pot” products, also known as K2, will be studied by the Department of Health and Human Services to determine whether the chemicals and the products should be permanently controlled, the DEA said.

“Over the past year, smokable herbal blends marketed as being ‘legal’ and providing a marijuana-like high, have become increasingly popular, particularly among teens and young adults,” the DEA said in a statement.”These products consist of plant material that has been coated with research chemicals that mimic THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, and are sold at a variety of retail outlets, in head shops and over the Internet.  These chemicals, however, have not been approved by the FDA for human consumption, and there is no oversight of the manufacturing process.”

http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/11/24/dea-outlaws-chemicals-used-to-make-synthetic-marijuana/

 

K2 or Spice or Synthetic Cannabis (Marijuana designer drug)

September 27, 2010 by Kandiyohi County Drug Free Communities Coalition No Comments »

 

Synthetic cannabis is a herbal and chemical product which mimics the effects of cannabis. It is best known by the brand names K2[1] and Spice[2]. When synthetic cannabis products first went on sale it was thought that they achieved an effect through a mixture of legal herbs. Laboratory analysis in 2008 showed this was not the case and that they in fact contained synthetic cannabinoids which act on the body in a similar way to cannabinoids naturally found in cannabis, such as THC. Synthetic cannabinoids, including cannabicyclohexanol, JWH-018, JWH-073, and HU-210, are used in an attempt to avoid the laws which make cannabis illegal, making synthetic cannabis a designer drug. It has been sold under various brand names, online, in head shops and at some gas stations. It is marketed as an incense or “herbal smoking blend”, but the products are usually smoked by users[citation needed]. Although synthetic cannabis does not produce positive results in drug tests for cannabis, it is possible to detect its metabolites in human urine. The synthetic cannabinoids contained in synthetic cannabis products have been made illegal in many European countries, but remain legal under federal law in the USA and Canada. Several US states have made it illegal under state law.Some forms of synthetic cannabis (HU-210) are currently scheduled in the USA under federal law while others are not (JWH-073).[54][55][56] The Drug Enforcement Agency considers it to be a “drug of concern”.[57] Several states have passed acts making it illegal under state law however, including Kansas in March 2010,[58] Georgia and Alabama in May 2010,[59][60] Tennessee and Missouri in July 2010,[61][62] Louisiana in August 2010, and Mississippi in September 2010. An emergency order was passed in Arkansas in July 2010, banning the sale of synthetic cannabis.[63] According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, several other states are also considering legislation, including Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Indiana, and Ohio.[62] Illinois passed a law on July 27, 2010 banning all synthetic cannabinoids that goes into effect January 1, 2011.[64]

Following cases in Okinawa and Japan involving the use of synthetic cannabis by Navy Army and Marine personnel resulted in the official banning of it,[65] a punitive general order issued on January 4, 2010 by the Commander Marine Corps Forces, Pacific prohibits the actual or attempted possession, use, sale, distribution or manufacture of synthetic cannabis as well as any derivative, analogue or variant of it.[66] On June 8, 2010, the U.S. Air Force issued a memorandum that banned the possession and use of Spice, or any other mood altering substance, among its service members.[67]

 Wikipedia.org