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Police say no to synthetic drugs like 'bath salts'

Local stings are part of nationwide effort

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The DEA displayed packets of alleged synthetic marijuana sold in packages labeled Crazy Eyes, Primo, and Cloud 9 Mad Hatter, all of which were being advertised on a website directly linked to Tha Grind's Facebook page.

Also displayed were seized bags of damiana leaf, a plant native to Texas, said Scott Collier, diversion program manager for the DEA's St. Louis division. Authorities believe manufacturers mix synthetic cannabinoids with acetone and then spray the substance onto the leaves in order to create a product that can be smoked.

The synthetic stimulants appeared to be a whitish powder that were sold in small jars for $40 a half-gram.

Users thinking they are putting something natural into bodies are mistaken, Gibbons said. Customers have no idea what they are buying because the products' labels provide no information about what is inside, he said.

"You have no idea what you're putting into your body," he said.

Two Madison County residents died of overdoses of bath salts last year, but that total was dwarfed by the number of people who died of prescription drug and heroin overdoses in the county. Although hospitals have reportedly treated many more nonfatal synthetic drug overdoses, neither St. Clair nor Madison County has confirmed additional fatal overdoses.

Governments across the country started outlawing synthetic drugs the last couple of years after poison centers and hospitals began reporting thousands of calls and overdoses involving synthetic marijuana and bath salts. The federal government joined in the fight by at first placing a temporary ban on both synthetic marijuana and certain synthetic stimulants and placing a permanent ban on 26 of these substances earlier this month.

One problem for law enforcement has been that drug manufacturers keep changing the formulas to avoid the bans.

Gibbons said prosecutors could look to charge the suspects under laws outlawing synthetic drugs and their analogues. Also, Illinois law outlaws the marketing and selling of products labeled not for human consumption, but which are being sold for that purpose, he said.

"They know full well the market they are trying to push this to," he said.

Not everyone was happy with the raids. For instance, the following messages were posted on Tha Grind's and Duck 'N Vals' Facebook pages, respectively:

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