Texarkana Gazette

Head shop chain, 28 individual­s indicted in synthetic pot case

-

DALLAS—A Texas head shop chain, its owner and his daughter are among almost three dozen businesses and individual­s accused in a federal indictment involving an alleged synthetic marijuana distributi­on ring.

Dallas-based Gas Pipe Inc., owner Gerald "Jerry" Shults, his daughter Amy Lynn Herrig, and Herrig's own Amy Lynn Inc. are among the 32 defendants named in the indictment unsealed in Dallas on Friday. All are charged with single counts of conspiracy, while Gas Pipe, Amy Lynn, Shults and Herrig are among defendants charged with multiple drug traffickin­g, conspiracy and money laundering counts.

A federal grand jury in Dallas handed up the indictment on May 6. Most of those charged in the indictment, including Shults and Herrig, have turned themselves in or been arrested. Shults and Herrig are jailed pending a detention hearing Monday.

Acting U.S. Attorney John Parker called the indictment "just another step in our continued effort to protect the citizens of this community from being harmed by the dangerous synthetic drugs that continue to be marketed as 'legal' alternativ­es to illicit drugs."

The indictment alleges that Gas Pipe and Amy Lynn sold millions of dollars in products commonly referred to as "spice" in the "designer" or synthetic drug market. That is a smokeable organic plant substance that has been combined with a synthetic cannabis-like substance. To maintain the illusion of legality, the products were marketed as "herbal incense," ''potpourri" or "aroma therapy products" ''not for human consumptio­n."

The U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion says "spice" can raise the heart rate and blood pressure and cause seizures, agitation, vomiting, hallucinat­ions, violent behavior, inability to breathe and psychotic episodes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States