Marijuana concentrates are causing overdoses and endangering the lives of users
No longer satisfied with the effects of marijuana, users are looking for ways to get better and greater highs. The legalization of marijuana has opened up new avenues of experimentation and drug development that is making marijuana use dangerous and life threatening.
The next big drug craze is marijuana derivatives brought
about by the legalization of marijuana, said Jermaine Galloway, drug enforcement
officer of the Boise Police Department, who spoke recently at the Utah Governor’s
Public Safety Summit. He trains, teaches, and consults with other police forces,
emergency medical services, and fire departments to bring them up on the
current trends in drug use.
According to Galloway, you can’t “just generalize” about
drug use anymore. His warnings about marijuana use apply as much to parents as to police officers.
While marijuana weed has 15% THC, the derivatives may be as high as 90 percent THC, he said.
THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, is the chemical responsible for most of marijuana's psychological effects. Cannabinoid receptors are concentrated in areas of the brain that control thinking, memory, pleasure, coordination and time perception. “THC attaches to these receptors and activates them and affects a person's memory, pleasure, movements, thinking, concentration, coordination, and sensory and time perception,” writes Alina Bradford of LiveScience.
At 15% THC a person may seem drowsy; at 90% a person becomes
high and appears to be on an LSD trip that can cause overdose and even death.
With the legalization of marijuana in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington, high concentrate THC is coming more available and is being exported to other states, as far away as the east coast. Just look at the license plates of customers lining up outside of cannabis shops in Denver, said Galloway. They are not locals.
The percentage of out of state license plates is 40 to 60
percent. They come from Vermont, Texas, and Missouri to Colorado to buy legal
drugs to take back to sell. At one store Galloway observed the sales person
selling a couple of boxes to out-of-state customers costing thousands of
dollars.
Marijuana concentrate (90% THC) |
This product can be purchased across the counter at cannabis
stores in states where it is legal. It is made into a number of products
including marijuana butter.
In addition to extracts, the Internet contains explicit instructions on how to use and make other marijuana products. The Stoner’s Cookbook gives recipes for cooking with marijuana butter.
Cooking with
Marijuana
Cannbutter or Bud butter |
“Eating marijuana is a little different from smoking it," says the recipe. "The
effects last much longer, and the experience can be a lot more intense. The
effects can take anywhere from 30 minutes to 2 hours to start.... When the effects do kick in you will start to feel very
relaxed. If you are sitting in a comfy spot, you may not want to move! Many
people refer to the effects as ‘Body Stoned’ because your body will feel very
relaxed and heavy.”
"Eating too much weed-infused food can be quite intense for some people," the recipe continues. "You may feel sick, confused, unable to move or talk, and your coordination may be heavily affected."
"Eating too much weed-infused food can be quite intense for some people," the recipe continues. "You may feel sick, confused, unable to move or talk, and your coordination may be heavily affected."
Laws have not caught up with the latest in cannabis and
marijuana use, said Galloway. A driver on 15% THC can overdose and cause an accident; at 90% he
is dangerous and even lethal. Also, the long term effects of using concentrates
are unknown.
Today's evolving drug
culture
The message is all about drugs and getting high |
“Legalization is changing attitudes toward drug use,”
according to Galloway. A Washington
state teacher is surpised by a shirt worn by a good student. “I didn't know you knew about this clothing,” she said. Kids are taking marijuana to school, and, when confiscated drug-user parents
are calling schools to get their pot back.
Drug culture clothing is sold in states and cities where marijuana is not
legal. Some of the ensignia and words say "Kush purple," "Just dabbin," "Dabs," "Keep calm and dab" and 4:20. Galloway saw a
Kush t-shirt at a school in Alabama, Kush hats in a mall in Utah, and Kush mouse
pads in an Iowa shopping mall. "They are all over if you are observant," he said. (Kush is
a sweet potent form of pot.) Parents can go to Google Image and search for any of the above
and see the varieties of clothing and other items.
Paraphernalia like bongs, beakers, e-cigarettes, vapor
devices, colorful pipes, vaporizers, and even Hi-liters are used for altering
or smoking marijuana products. Parents can see these items on the Internet by searching for marijuana paraphernalia.
Many shops online sell clothing and paraphernalia as well.
How is that related
to drug world
E-device |
While only four states have legalized marijuana for
recreational use, other states are considering changing their laws. California
and Nevada are not charging marijuana users while Montana, Arizona, and New
Mexico have medical marijuana laws.
Most objections to legalization claim marijuana is a gateway
drug that leads to hard drugs such as heroin or cocaine. Libertarians claim
since adults are free to buy and drink alcohol, they should also be able to buy
marijuana, which they claim is not nearly as harmful. Both ignore the real
effects and dangers of marijuana concentrates and derivatives. Approximately 45
percent of sales are legal in Colorado. The volume of marijuana sold in
legalized states is huge and it is going across the nation.
Colorado and
legalization
While Colorado has legalized marijuana, it still has cartels
that own and control the drug growers and distribution. While many legitimate buyers go in the front
end of a store, the backdoor has a line that goes around the building. To enter
a “recreational center” a customer has to be 21 years old. ($100 will buy fake
IDs in 10 days from China that work in police scanners.)
Free publications everywhere in the state talk about drugs. Stores
sell marijuana joints, but also make and sell concentrates. They have growing
rooms as well as dispensaries. The “budtender,” not a bartender, show customers the different strains and various products. Good daytime strains are used for
medical purposes but variations with more energy can create hallucinations
Products and various paraphernalia
Different marijuana pot strains give different effects. Some
of the names are Flo, Sour diesel, Super lemon haze, Sugar daddy, Super skunk, Range,
Trinity, Laffie, and Golden goat. Customers can buy wax oils and concentrates, balms, lotions, vape pens, e-cigs, and edible
topicals and food, like marijuana infused gummy candy, a marijuana product that
looks like a candy bar, popcorn, nuts or peanuts, even gluten free. Jolley
rancher candies melted down and frozen.
They are rolled in powder sugar so they don't melt together. Caviar dry
marijuana is dipped in wax and California raisins are coated to become honey
buds.
While better strains of marijuana may be sold from
dispensaries, it changes at the street level and at schools where it is still
illegal. At one middle school, nineteen students had sampled the candy and didn’t even know it was marijuana.
Drug culture T-shirt |
E-devices and vape pens are mobile and discreet because as an outsider it is impossible to know what you are looking at. Shatter, shard or dab wax are burned in the vape pen or bong and are made from waxing concentrates of 90 percent THC. These are the preferred way of smoking among teens because an observer can't tell if the device has tobacco or marijuana. The contents of e-devices are much more concentrated and navigable than a pipe. The results are much more immediate.
A black titanium small-nail shaped device can be bought in stores or online. While it requires additional equipment, it is designed for
vaporizing concentrates, having a suitable surface to retain and conduct heat
for vaporization. Cannabis liquid extract, drug based esticks, budder or wax
are produced that can cause hallucinations and passing out. The producers of Caviar
Gold, which is considered high quality marijuana, are using hip hop and rappers
to promote their product.
Messenging
To be able to understand the drug culture, a person has to
understand drug messenging. April 20, according to the Huffington Post, is international
weed day. 4:20 is also the universal time of day to get high. “A group of five San
Rafael High School friends known as the Waldos -- by virtue of their chosen
hangout spot, a wall outside the school -- coined the term in 1971.” In the drug culture are all sorts of references to April 20: 4:20, 4/20, forty to five, Mile 419.99.
420 is the Austin, Texas telephone area code and half of that is 210, the area
code for San Antonio.
Cool drug terms come from the marijuana world but they don't
stay there, said Galloway.
4:20 - the time to get high |
The dangerous side of
marijuana use
The media are full of examples where marijuana use has gone bad. The use of Butane in producing marijuana derivatives leads to the highest THC concentrate and can lead to both explosions and overdoses.
Here are some examples from the press:
College students overdose on hash oil. “6 college students
sent to hospital after hash oil overdose, St. George police say,” Fox 13 Salt
Lake City (December 15, 2014).
Young people overdose on candy bars and pass out at the
wheel. “Marijuana 'edibles' pack a
wallop,” USA Today (May 8, 2014).
The Washington Post indicates homeowners and landlords have a new
concern. Explosions from drug use can cause death or body injuries. “Marijuana
is the bomb.” The Washington Post (February 20, 2015).
When a marijuana user couldn’t get his generator to work, he
threw it in the back seat of his car and then lit a cigarette. “Man lit a
cigarette in a car full of butane vapors, triggering explosion.” KXLY 4 News Spokane,
WA (August 5, 2013.)
An 18-year-old collapsed in tears and told a police officer
"I just killed my grandma" after accidentally starting a fire while
making drugs. KARE 11 Minneapolis St Paul (March 25, 2015).
Designer drugs add
another layer to drug abuse
Ecstasy, Molly or SKY |
It’s commonly referred to as Molly or Sky, but other terms are
Adam, Thizz, Beans, and Tablets. Users speak in terms of “Molly is my home girl,”
“Where's Molly?” “I'm on one,” “Rollin,
rolling, rolls,” or “Rolling over at the movie theater.” It can be disguised as finger lights, streamers,
and tracers, glow bracelets, pacifiers, necklaces, and flow sticks and often
available at large events in event centers.
Another drug is Kratom, which comes from Southeast Asia. Prosecutors
compare it to heroin, but it’s perfectly legal to buy and available on store
shelves. It comes in the form of a tea leaf, powder, smoke or snort and is highly
addictive. In low doses it acts like stimulant; in higher doses it acts as a
pain killer or opiate. It can be bought
at many gas stations. Cough medicines are another stimulant.
Clothing lines identify this drug culture also. One symbol is “blood shot red eyes.” A mushroom
necklace is a popular identifier. Clothing identifiers are “DGK ALL DAY,” “Dirty
Ghetto Kids,” “Legalize DGK,” and “Chiefin getting high.” “Don’t TRIP” refers
to LSD. “100 percent” is talking about ecstasy.
“Money does grow” says another clothing label.
What can be done
Galloway suggests police officers (and parents) take a trip to the local mall to see what
is being sold. Watch things that promote the drug culture that kids (and
adults) are purchasing. Teach family and friends about drug abuse and
share information with others in email groups. Above all, "don’t think you
are exempt," he said. "Watch what your kids are bringing home and check their rooms and
things regularly for drugs, paraphenalia, or drug culture clothing." Galloway can be friended on Facebook
by liking “Tall Cop Says Stop” and followed on Twitter @tallcopsaysstop.
In the following video Boise Police Department Officer Jermaine Galloway talks
about some things parents should look for in their kid's bedroom concerning
drugs and drug paraphernalia.
Sources:
Cooking with weed. (n.d.). Retrieved June 12, 2015, from
http://www.thestonerscookbook.com/how_to_cook_with_weed.php
Bradford, A. (2015, April 7). What is THC? Retrieved June
12, 2015, from http://www.livescience.com/24553-what-is-thc.html
Grim, R. (2009, April 20). 4/20: How 'Weed Day' Got Its
Name. Retrieved June 12, 2015, from
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/20/420-weed-day-marijuana-april-holiday_n_3122359.html
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