Is Weed Really Being Laced with Fentanyl?

Is Weed Really Being Laced with Fentanyl?

On Monday, a US senator and a local coroner held a depressingly banal press conference on the opioid crisis in Ohio, where death tolls have spiked in part due to hard drugs like heroin being laced with the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl. The duo repeated talking points that should have been all-too-familiar to anyone listening, like that the Buckeye State's overdose death rate is nearly double the national average, and Hamilton Countywhich includes Cincinnatihas it particularly bad.

It was the kind of small-time PSA that tends to get unnoticed by the national press, fixated as it is on the Trump-Russia investigation and the possible collapse of the Republic. But one line from the press conference has since spread across the internet like wildfire, reaching as far as Miami.

"We have seen fentanyl mixed with cocaine, we have also seen fentanyl mixed with marijuana," said coroner Lakshmi Sammarco.

Rumors about laced pot tend to crop up whenever a new drug gains a following. Most of us have heard about dusted drugs or wet weedthough the likelihood of getting tricked into smoking PCP a la Ethan Hawke in Training Day has probably always been slimmer than urban legends might have you believe. As for the allegedly fentanyl-laced cocaine the coroner mentioned, earlier this month, the NYC Health Department did in fact put out a warning about fentanyl-tinged coke in America's largest city; critics countered that there was no way to tell if victims with the two drugs in their systems didn't just consume them separately.

Lloyd Johnston, who runs the US government's massive youth drug survey out of the University of Michigan, told me that while laced weed does have a well-documented history, the chances of finding bud infused with fentanyl seems extremely remote.


Check out the story of one opioid user who beat their dangerous fentanyl habit.


And Kirk Maxey, who works with law enforcement agencies like the DEA to test suspected synthetic opioids, said that not only would such a mixture be rareit might not even be scientifically possible.

"Documenting the pipe chemistry of fentanyl in leaf material would be a research paper," he told me. "And I don't think it's been done yet."

Fentanyl is no jokeit's 50 times stronger than heroin, which is plenty deadly on its own. But it's important to keep in mind that this isn't the first time we've seen this rumor spread out of Ohio alone. The Painesville Township Fire Department ignited a small panic this February by posting on Facebook about three overdose patients who seemed to be on fentanyl even though they claimed to have only smoked weed. After the post went viral, the department conceded that the patients had probably used drugs besides pot.

And as alarmistor just plain terrifyingas Sammarco's warning might seem to recreational pot smokers, it left a lot of unanswered questions worthy of scrutiny. Chief among them is how her office might have determined that a body came in with fentanyl-laced marijuana in its system as opposed to marijuana in addition to opioids.

When reached for comment by VICE about her methodology, Sammarco said that her quote had been unfortunately misinterpreted. Her office hasn't seen fentanyl-laced weed at all, she clarified, adding that Rob Portman, the US senator with whom she appeared Monday, told her it had been spotted in Northeast Ohio. She told me she didn't know the senator's source of information.

One possible ...

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