Texarkana Gazette

Vapes spiked with illegal drugs show dark side of CBD craze

- By Holbrook Mohr

Jay Jenkins says he hesitated when a buddy suggested they vape CBD.

“It’ll relax you,” the friend assured.

The vapor that Jenkins inhaled didn’t relax him. After two puffs, he ended up in a coma.

That’s because the vapor he inhaled wasn’t CBD, a natural compound that marketers say can treat a range of ailments without getting users high. Instead, the vape was spiked with a powerful, man-made street drug.

Some operators are cashing in on the CBD craze by substituti­ng cheap and illegal synthetic marijuana for real CBD in vapes and edibles such as gummy bears, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found.

Spiked vapes have sent dozens of people like Jenkins to emergency rooms over the last two years. Yet people behind the products have operated with impunity, in part because the business has boomed so fast that regulators haven’t caught up while drug enforcemen­t agents have higher priorities.

AP commission­ed laboratory testing of the vape Jenkins used plus 29 other vape products sold as CBD around the country, with a focus on brands that authoritie­s or users flagged as suspect. Ten of the 30 contained synthetic marijuana, which is commonly known as K2 or spice.

One brand, a pod compatible with Juul electronic cigarettes called Green Machine, contained a different kind of synthetic marijuana depending on the flavor and even location of purchase.

“It’s Russian roulette,” said James Neal-Kababick, director of Flora Research Laboratori­es, which tested the products.

The results of AP’s testing echo what authoritie­s have found, a nationwide survey of law enforcemen­t agencies shows.

At least 128 samples out of more than 350 tested by government labs in nine states, nearly all in the South, had synthetic marijuana in products marketed as CBD, according to informatio­n the states provided AP. Gummy bears and other edibles accounted for 36 hits, while nearly all others were vape products. Mississipp­i authoritie­s also found fentanyl, the opioid involved in about 30,000 overdose deaths last year.

Because testing by both authoritie­s and AP focused on suspect products, the results are not representa­tive of the overall market.

Vaping in general has come under increased scrutiny recently because hundreds of users have developed mysterious lung illnesses, and several have died. The AP’s investigat­ion focused on yet another set of cases, in which psychoacti­ve chemicals are added to products presented as CBD.

CBD, short for cannabidio­l, is one of many chemicals found in cannabis, a plant known more commonly as marijuana. Most CBD is made from hemp, a cannabis variety cultivated for fiber or other uses. Unlike its more famous cousin THC, cannabidio­l doesn’t get users high. Sales of CBD have been driven in part by unproven claims that it can reduce pain, calm anxiety, increase focus and even prevent disease.

Jay Jenkins says he tried CBD because he was bored. He had just finished his freshman year at The Citadel, a South Carolina military college, when he decided to try CBD in May 2018. He said a friend bought a blueberry flavored vape called Yolo! — the acronym for “you only live once” — from a convenienc­e store in Lexington, South Carolina.

After Jenkins became unresponsi­ve his friend drove them to the hospital, where Jenkins suffered acute respirator­y failure, his medical records show.

“I thought that I actually already dead,” Jenkins said.

By the next day he had recovered, and as he left hospital staff gave the Yolo cartridge back Jenkins, who provided it to AP.

Lab testing found a type of synthetic marijuana that has been blamed for at least 11 deaths in Europe.

Yolo products containing the same drug were implicated in rash of illnesses in Utah several months

was

before Jenkins was poisoned. Authoritie­s never caught anyone.

The people behind spiked vapes leave few clues about who makes them or what’s inside.

Packaging doesn’t identify the companies and their brands have little online presence. Newcomers can simply design a label and outsource production to a wholesaler that deals in bulk.

The opaque system of manufactur­ing and distributi­on hampers criminal investigat­ions and leaves victims of spiked products with little recourse.

And there’s a financial incentive to cut corners. One website advertises synthetic marijuana for as little as $25 per pound — the same amount of CBD costs hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

“People have started to see the market grow and there are some fly-by-night companies trying to make a quick buck,” said Marielle Weintraub, president of the U.S. Hemp Authority, an industry group

that certifies CBD cosmetics and dietary supplement­s.

While synthetic marijuana is a concern, Weintraub said the industry has many reputable companies.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has approved one CBD-based medicine for treating seizures associated with two rare and severe forms of epilepsy, but says it cannot be added to food, drinks or dietary supplement­s. FDA is considerin­g new regulation­s.

Because CBD is the active ingredient in an FDA-approved drug, FDA is responsibl­e for regulating its sale in the U.S. But if CBD products are found to contain narcotics, the agency considers the investigat­ion a job for the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

But DEA has to prioritize drugs causing more severe problems, said spokeswoma­n Mary Brandenber­ger, such as fentanyl and methamphet­amines.

 ?? Allen G. Breed/Associated Press ?? ■ A Yolo! brand CBD oil vape cartridge sits alongside a vape pen on a biohazard bag on a table at a park May 8 in Ninety Six, S.C. Jay Jenkins says two hits from the vape put him in a coma and nearly killed him in 2018. Lab testing commission­ed by The Associated Press shows this cartridge and several other vapes marketed as delivering CBD instead contained synthetic marijuana, a street drug commonly known as K2 or spice.
Allen G. Breed/Associated Press ■ A Yolo! brand CBD oil vape cartridge sits alongside a vape pen on a biohazard bag on a table at a park May 8 in Ninety Six, S.C. Jay Jenkins says two hits from the vape put him in a coma and nearly killed him in 2018. Lab testing commission­ed by The Associated Press shows this cartridge and several other vapes marketed as delivering CBD instead contained synthetic marijuana, a street drug commonly known as K2 or spice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States