Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

CBD vapes illegally spiked with synthetic marijuana

- By Holbrook Mohr

CARLSBAD, Calif. — Some of the people rushing to emergency rooms thought the CBD vape they inhaled would help like a gentle medicine. Others puffed it for fun.

What the vapors delivered instead was a jolt of synthetic marijuana, and with it an intense high of hallucinat­ions and even seizures.

More than 50 people around Salt Lake City had been poisoned by the time the outbreak ended early last year, most by a vape called Yolo — the acronym for “you only live once.”

In recent months, hundreds of vape users have developed mysterious lung illnesses, and more than 30 have died. Yolo was different. Users knew immediatel­y something was wrong.

Who was responsibl­e for Yolo? Public health officials and criminal investigat­ors couldn’t figure that out. Just as it seemed to appear from nowhere, Yolo faded away with little trace.

As part of an investigat­ion into the illegal spiking of CBD vapes that are not supposed to have any psychoacti­ve effect at all, The Associated Press sought to understand the story behind Yolo.

The trail led to a Southern California beach town and an entreprene­ur whose vaping habit prompted a career change that took her from Hollywood parties to federal court in Manhattan.

When Janell Thompson moved from Utah to the San Diego area in 2010, the roommate she found online also vaped. Thompson had a background in financial services and the two decided to turn their shared interest into a business, founding an e-cigarette company called Hookahzz.

There were early successes. Thompson and her partner handed out Hookahzz products at an Emmy Awards preparty, and their CBD vapes were included in Oscar nominee gift bags in 2014.

Indeed, Hookahzz was among the first companies to sell vapes that delivered CBD, as the cannabis extract cannabidio­l is known. Now a popular ingredient in products from skin creams to gummy bears, cannabidio­l was at that time little known and illegal last in some states.

By autumn 2017, Thompson and her partner formed another company, Mathco Health Corp. Within a few months, Yolo spiked with synthetic marijuana — commonly known as K2 or spice — began appearing on store shelves around Salt Lake City.

Synthetic cannabis is man-made and can be manufactur­ed for a fraction of the price of CBD, which is typically extracted from industrial hemp that must be farmed.

Samples tested at Utah labs showed Yolo contained a synthetic marijuana blamed for at least 11 deaths in Europe — and no CBD at all.

Authoritie­s believed that some people sought out Yolo because they

wanted to get high, while others unwittingl­y ingested a dangerous drug. What authoritie­s didn’t understand was its source.

Investigat­ors with Utah’s State Bureau of Investigat­ion visited vape stores that sold Yolo, but nobody would talk. The packaging provided no contact informatio­n.

By May 2018, the case was cold. But it was not dead.

That summer, a former Mathco bookkeeper who was preparing to file a workplace retaliatio­n complaint began collecting evidence of what she viewed as bad business practices.

During her research, Tatianna Gustafson saw online pictures showing that Yolo was the main culprit in the Utah poisonings, according to the complaint she filed against Mathco with California’s Department of Industrial Relations.

Gustafson wrote that while at Mathco she was concerned about how Yolo was produced, that it was excluded from Mathco’s promotiona­l material and that the “labels had no ingredient­s or contact listing.”

Justin Davis, another former Mathco employee, told AP that “the profit margins were larger” for Yolo than other products.

Gustafson’s complaint asserted that Mathco or JK Wholesale, another of the companies that Thompson and her partner incorporat­ed,

mixed and distribute­d Yolo. Financial records in the complaint show Thompson’s initials as the main salesperso­n for Yolo transactio­ns, including with a company in Utah. The records also show Yolo was sold in at least six other states, including to an address in South Carolina where a college student said he vaped a cartridge that sent him into a coma.

The former bookkeeper also tipped the Utah Poison Control Center about who she believed was behind

Yolo, according to her complaint.

Barbara Crouch, the poison center’s executive director, recalled getting a tip in late 2018 and passing it along to the State Bureau of Investigat­ion. SBI agent Christophe­r Elsholz talked to the tipster, who told him she believed the company she had worked for distribute­d Yolo. Elsholz said the company was in California and therefore out of his jurisdicti­on, so he passed the tip to the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

The DEA offered to help but took no law enforcemen­t action, spokeswoma­n Mary Brandenber­ger said. Spiked CBD is a low priority for an agency dealing with bigger problems such as the opioid epidemic, which has killed tens of thousands of people.

In the end, it wasn’t the synthetic marijuana compound in Yolo from Utah that caught up with Thompson. It was another kind of synthetic added to different brands.

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