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Heroin laced cannabis heading to Brighton streets, police fear


Dealers are lacing cannabis with highly addictive heroin to get users hooked on the deadly drug.

Secret off-the-record discussions between police and a supplier in London have revealed how recreational drug users are being tricked into becoming addicted to Class A drugs.

Officers fear it could lead to a surge in addicts in Brighton and Hove, which is already known as the drug death capital of England.

They believe cannabis users are becoming accidentally dragged into heroin use.

It follows the discovery that potent, paranoia-inducing cannabis, known as skunk, was being sold in large quantities in Brighton and Hove last year.

Detective Sergeant Hari McCarthy, of Sussex Police, said: “People buy it thinking it’s just very strong weed.”

“It’s not being sold as skunk, just good weed, but it’s an easy way to get users hooked on heroin.”

She added that dealers mixed various chemicals with cannabis before selling it, including tranquillisers and even urine.

There are believed to be 2,300 heroin addicts in Brighton and Hove.

The revelation was made during an inquest in Brighton into the death of 34-year-old electrician Lee Donlan from a heroin overdose.

Clinical and forensic toxicologist Peter Sharpe confirmed that taking mixtures of drugs was becoming more and more common in Brighton and Hove, in particular the highly dangerous combination known as speedballing.

He said: “There’s a mixture called speedballing – it’s heroin with a bit of cocaine, usually injected into the arm or ankle.

“People like the mixture of heroin and cocaine because the cocaine reduces the low that comes after the heroin.”

The combination has become well-known because of the famous Hollywood lives it has claimed.

Promising actor River Phoenix died aged 23 in 1993 after injecting himself with a speedball in the Viper Room nightclub in Los Angeles.

Blues Brothers star John Belushi also died in Los Angeles after he took the drug aged 33 in 1982 while comic actor Chris Farley died after taking it in 1997.

Although no needles were found next to Mr Donlan’s body when it was discovered at the flat in Norfolk Mews, Brighton, Dr Sharpe said the mixture of both cocaine and heroin in his blood was suggestive of speedballing.

Mr Donlan had an amount of alcohol in his blood equivalent to about six pints of beer as well as cocaine and 0.13mg per litre of heroin.

He said: “Between 0.1mg and 0.2mg is typical of a heroin death.”

The father-of-one had not been known by his friends or family to be a heroin user and Karen Henderson, the deputy assistant coroner for Brighton and Hove, said it may have been the first time he had tried the drug.

His uncle, Geoffrey Wilcock, described Mr Donlan as a “gentle giant” and said he had met up with him a week before and he showed no signs of being a drug user.

Dr Henderson criticised Sussex Police for the investigation into Mr Donlan’s death.

Despite finding more than 7g of cocaine under his mattress police did not deem the death to be drug related until the postmortem results came through by which point she said vital evidence may have been missed.

DS McCarthy agreed it was unusual that nobody who attended the scene deemed it to be a drug related death and no investigation was carried out into Mr Donlan’s phone records to track down a potential supplier of the lethal cocktail.

Addressing DS McCarthy, Dr Henderson said: “Your lack of ability to find evidence is seriously compromising to this inquiry.

It is unsatisfactory on every level.”

A 999 call was made by Mr Donlan’s flatmate, Finlay Finlayson, at about 12.55pm on March 6.

Paramedics were called but he was declared dead.

After his body was removed duty officers attended the scene but despite finding a bag of white powder no more senior officer was called as the death was not deemed to be drug related.

DS McCarthy said: “In hindsight I should have attended the scene.”

Police have said they will look into the case again.

Dr Henderson recorded an open verdict.

After the inquest a police spokeswoman said: “There was an investigation at the time to seek to identify how he came to be in possession of and subsequently take the heroin but at the time police were not able to establish those facts.”

Comments(60)

maxiboy says...
10:02am Thu 13 Aug 09

Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.

tilburyre says...
10:13am Thu 13 Aug 09

The alternative, Maxiboy, is to legalise all drugs and sell them at realistic prices. The dealers will be out of business and the addicts will kill themselves in a few years. People are allowed to kill themselves with nictoine and alcohol so why not with hard drugs?

brightonparty says...
10:36am Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
yeah like that's worked for the past 40 years. Donut! You can't have a war on drugs, the only winners are the gangsters. I'd rather give heroin addicts free gear and they can do some community work till they get clean or OD. Wouldn't want the government to be in charge of selling drugs, look at the mess they've made with alcohol.

brightonparty says...
10:37am Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
yeah like that's worked for the past 40 years. Donut! You can't have a war on drugs, the only winners are the gangsters. I'd rather give heroin addicts free gear and they can do some community work till they get clean or OD. Wouldn't want the government to be in charge of selling drugs, look at the mess they've made with alcohol.

Osama bin there says...
10:40am Thu 13 Aug 09

tilburyre wrote:
The alternative, Maxiboy, is to legalise all drugs and sell them at realistic prices. The dealers will be out of business and the addicts will kill themselves in a few years. People are allowed to kill themselves with nictoine and alcohol so why not with hard drugs?
Totally agree. It would cut crime by about 50% overnight.
But no one's going to do it, even though 50 years of drug prohibition hasn't worked. If fact things are worse now than they have ever been.
There are people far cleverer than me - including ex policemen - who think that it's the only solution.

kkj says...
10:49am Thu 13 Aug 09

I don't have the answer but I don't think legalising all drugs, hard and soft, is it.

Tilburyre suggests selling them at 'realistic prices'; what's a realistic price? Something most people can afford or something that provides oodles of tax for the government (ref tobacco and alcohol)?


bibble says...
10:50am Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
It doesn't work! In countries where there is capital punishment (and a little torture thrown in for good measure) like Iran, drugs are a MAJOR problem.

When will the anti-drugs and prohibitionists open their eyes? They must be on something.

Bennn says...
10:50am Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
What a good idea to wash blood with blood! And yeah, lets outlaw alcohol and imprison all those who drink beer! And all the bars and pubs will close too, making tens of thousands unemployed! Great thinking mate!

bibble says...
10:55am Thu 13 Aug 09

kkj wrote:
I don't have the answer but I don't think legalising all drugs, hard and soft, is it. Tilburyre suggests selling them at 'realistic prices'; what's a realistic price? Something most people can afford or something that provides oodles of tax for the government (ref tobacco and alcohol)?
The word you want is "re-legalise".

Drugs used to be legal. And when they were there were very few addicts, almost no crime attributed to druggies, no gangsters making bazillions, no turf wars between drug gangs, nor numerous other criminal aspects of modern life that we have become attuned to.

The so-called war on drugs is a failure. It cannot be won.

Variable says...
11:16am Thu 13 Aug 09

I predict that this story will be shown to be a load of scaremongering rubbish. Lacing weed with heroin to create unwitting addicts - it's about as real as the scare stories we used to hear about 'pushers' giving free bags of drugs to children leaving school.
The drugs retail business doesn't work that way.
There's been cases of cheap 'ditch weed' being adulterated and dipped in ground animal tranquilisers for instance, but adding £60/gram heroin to £5/gram weed is not a business model for success.
Simple solution: Legalise, control and tax all drugs.

stan bailey says...
11:21am Thu 13 Aug 09

kkj wrote:
I don't have the answer but I don't think legalising all drugs, hard and soft, is it.

Tilburyre suggests selling them at 'realistic prices'; what's a realistic price? Something most people can afford or something that provides oodles of tax for the government (ref tobacco and alcohol)?

Its probably just what the country needs, a new tax vein to get us out of the financial mess we are in. It also like smokers and drinkers has the benefit that they will die young and so not have to be paid pensions. Stop paying young girls to have babies and the country will put to right in no time

Nobody You Know says...
11:29am Thu 13 Aug 09

Are you people serious? Do you actually believe any of this rubbish? This is the sort of story I would expect to see in The Daily Mail, blatant and unbalanced scaremongering. Do you really think Brighton is sunk under the haze of cannabis laced with heroin? Really? Do you think the local aficionados of weed are unwittingly toking on urine-laced grass? Come on people, grow up. And The Argus should know better than this sort of one-trick story to appeal to its dwindling audience.

UglyAmerican says...
11:34am Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
You are a colonic stoma.

They've tried scare tactics like this before in the US.

RickH says...
11:42am Thu 13 Aug 09

Nobody You Know wrote:
Are you people serious? Do you actually believe any of this rubbish? This is the sort of story I would expect to see in The Daily Mail, blatant and unbalanced scaremongering. Do you really think Brighton is sunk under the haze of cannabis laced with heroin? Really? Do you think the local aficionados of weed are unwittingly toking on urine-laced grass? Come on people, grow up. And The Argus should know better than this sort of one-trick story to appeal to its dwindling audience.
Hear hear!! This story does the rounds every five years or so. Can someone tell me how on Earth can someone get hooked and then make further purchases of something they don't know they've taken and therefore don't know what to buy. I'm not sure who is most gullible with regard to this story: the police for peddling it, the Argus for printing it or the commentators here for reacting to it. Mid-August and all the 'Silly Season' stories are appearing!!!! And for those history buffs - the US tried Prohibition (of alcohol) and the only result was to allow organised crime to make shed-loads of money and establish themselves in the US and over the world. Then it was repealed and the crime syndicates diversified into other areas. Fast-forward to now and its easy to see how you can swap 'alcohol' for the other banned substances - prohibition of any kind does not work (clearly)!

puddingandpi says...
11:50am Thu 13 Aug 09

relegalise & tax, we'll be out of the recession in no time!


rhinofish says...
12:01pm Thu 13 Aug 09

"It follows the discovery that potent, paranoia-inducing cannabis, known as skunk, was being sold in large quantities in Brighton and Hove last year."

Skunk has been sold in large quantities here for more than 10 years.

“It’s not being sold as skunk, just good weed, but it’s an easy way to get users hooked on heroin.”

How? That is just not true. Where does Detective Sergeant Hari McCarthy get this information and is there any evidence to support it? This is blatant scaremongering by the police.

As for heroin being mixed with skunk and weed, forget it, its a fairy tale. Dealers would not waste heroin that way and the cannabis smokers would notice the difference if it were physically possible.

All this talk of super strong cannabis is rubbish too. The hashish that was available here to most people is known as soapbar and is well known to be contaminated with anything from animal tranquillisers to human feaces. There is better quality available including skunk.

Skunk is no stronger than proper hash and cannabis like durban poison, thai stick, malawi cob and zimbabwe red. It is just an urban myth generated by the media with a smattering of government and police propaganda thrown in. I have friends in their 50s and 60s who have smoked cannabis all their lives. Have led full and productive lives. And, would never consider taking herion, cocaine or any other nasty powder.

Naomi Loomes and the Argus please get your facts straight and stop perpetuating this vile fiction.

0-0-0 says...
12:39pm Thu 13 Aug 09

maxiboy wrote:
Outlaw all drugs. Imprison all drug users and sellers for life. Execute all drug smugglers. The only way.
This is what several south east Asian countries have been doing for years - to no effect.

PS: Oh I love it! Security word is "roll-blow" - I'm not joking!

mokum777 says...
12:47pm Thu 13 Aug 09

(1) the myth of cannabis being laced with hard drugs circulates regularly and has never been true, because it's fundamentally illogical and (2) the only thing that cannabis has in common with heroin is its illegal status.
If society is genuinely concerned that cannabis users will progress to harder drugs, the sensible course is to separate the sale of cannabis from the black market where hard drugs are sold. As in Holland, which country enjoys the lowest addiction rates in Europe.

bigduff says...
12:48pm Thu 13 Aug 09

i reckon us good productive weed smokers sue the argus for libel. im fed up with the blatant lies that the reporters plaster over the front page. Give it up argus, you have a duty to the public to stop your lies.

bleeding crappy journalism

mokum777 says...
12:55pm Thu 13 Aug 09

your so called journalists should be sacked for their lies, incompetence and lazy reporting. just spouting the same nonsense as other right-wing rags like the daily mail doesn't make it true.

mokum777 says...
1:01pm Thu 13 Aug 09

if this non-story was acually true, (and it obviously isn't), the most effective way to stop adulteration of such a beneficial herb would be to allow personal cultivation of a few plants by anyone who wants to avoid buying their herbs from criminals. but i guess that doesn't fit with the right-wing media agenda of the argus?

Interociter says...
1:08pm Thu 13 Aug 09

"potent, paranoia-inducing cannabis, known as skunk"

Er, no. Would you mind referencing the research where this is shown?

Nick Brighton says...
1:11pm Thu 13 Aug 09

We also need to rid ourselves of the idea that legalising drugs will reduce the number of gangsters. Gangsters may be just that: Gangsters. They may just want money and power. Currently their vehicle is drugs. Legalise drugs, you remove their money and power. So, the may just divert their activities to other avenues to regain their status.

0-0-0 says...
1:13pm Thu 13 Aug 09

If you relegalise these drugs and allow its sale at near-cost price from pharmacists, GPs' surgeries etc. then you cut out this major revenue stream from source of criminals, and greatly reduce shoplifting, burglaries, bagsnatching and so on by addicts.

0-0-0 says...
1:19pm Thu 13 Aug 09

0-0-0 wrote:
If you relegalise these drugs and allow its sale at near-cost price from pharmacists, GPs' surgeries etc. then you cut out this major revenue stream from source of criminals, and greatly reduce shoplifting, burglaries, bagsnatching and so on by addicts.
Ooh, I garbled this a bit. Meant to say

"If you relegalise these drugs and allow its sale at near-cost price from pharmacists, GPs' surgeries etc. then you cut out this major revenue stream from criminals, and greatly reduce shoplifting, burglaries, bagsnatching and so on by addicts."

simonp503 says...
1:38pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Nobody You Know wrote:
Are you people serious? Do you actually believe any of this rubbish? This is the sort of story I would expect to see in The Daily Mail, blatant and unbalanced scaremongering. Do you really think Brighton is sunk under the haze of cannabis laced with heroin? Really? Do you think the local aficionados of weed are unwittingly toking on urine-laced grass? Come on people, grow up. And The Argus should know better than this sort of one-trick story to appeal to its dwindling audience.
Spot on,and has been said on the posts the silly summer season stories are with us again.
Come on Argus stop falling for this rubbish. lol

mark100 says...
2:05pm Thu 13 Aug 09

The article is in some places so factually inacurate the writer should be ashamed.
Cannabis has never and will never be adulterated with drugs of higher value gram for gram.
It is adulterated with low value, highly dangerous substances....glass beads, oil, faeces, henna, wax etc.
This is a health issue, not one of criminality.
Legalise supply, control the purity, take away the black market instantly and make use of the tax revenue.
So hypocritical when 1000's die each year due to alcohol and tobacco

Granny says...
2:05pm Thu 13 Aug 09

I don't think the story has been in the Daily Mail - Just the Argus which is ten times worse!

Osama bin there says...
2:07pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Nick Brighton wrote:
We also need to rid ourselves of the idea that legalising drugs will reduce the number of gangsters. Gangsters may be just that: Gangsters. They may just want money and power. Currently their vehicle is drugs. Legalise drugs, you remove their money and power. So, the may just divert their activities to other avenues to regain their status.
I won't dignify these scum by calling them 'gangsters'. They are career criminals (a lot less glamorous). Career criminals will always exist, and at the moment drugs are an easy way to make a load of money without that much risk. And yes, if drugs were legalised they would move onto some other scam.
But just think of all the petty crime - burglaries, car theft, mobile phone theft, muggings, etc that are all perpetrated by the desperate addict looking for money to buy his next fix.
Most of that should become a thing of the past if drugs were legalised and sold at a reasonable price, like alcohol.

Trevor T says...
2:40pm Thu 13 Aug 09

This is desperate propaganda from people who do not have a clue . Legalisation is the only sane way to go and we will look back on the 'war on drugs' as sheer madness . Even the UN are now changing their mind and admitting that the 'war on drugs' is a complete and utter failure .
You should be ashamed of yourselves for printing this .

Louise A says...
3:18pm Thu 13 Aug 09

I agree with almost everything written here except what the first idiot wrote ! Grow up Maxiboy. And the Argus should be thoroughly ashamed.

mokum777 says...
3:30pm Thu 13 Aug 09

there is also the fact that heroin wont burn, if the powder is placed in a joint. to smoke heroin, it has to be vaporised, by heating on tinfoil. think the argus has either had its leg pulled, or its just knowingly printing lies.

jacob11 says...
4:29pm Thu 13 Aug 09

This is rather ridiculous - it is incredibly easy to identify when cannabis has been laced with a substance such as heroin. You will see brown powder on the bud - simply shaking it will make a load fall off. And adding heroin to cannabis will significantly increase the dealer's costs, it will not be financially worthwhile - cannabis has many, many regular (not addicted - but enjoyed) users anyway.

Cannabis use is becoming more and more a normality in the UK now. 1/3rd of 16-59 year olds have tried (illegal) drugs, and almost 1/2 of 16-29. Thus, many people are finding these horror stories literally incredible now.

And let's not forget - the very reason these health risks are about is because the Government has given cannabis trade to criminals, instead of to corporations.

jacob11 says...
4:32pm Thu 13 Aug 09

And I'd also like to add to the above: this is an incredibly rare case, probably due to one in the thousands of dealers out there doing a short-term experiment, which he will no doubt financially regret, and revert back to normally Cannabis dealing. Legalise, tax and regulate!

yorkie44 says...
5:11pm Thu 13 Aug 09

This claims to reports "secret" discussions, obviously they are not a secret now. I suspect this will all come to ntohing. Should eb really care if people want to kill themselves or damage their health with drugs and booze. They know the risks, let them determine how they live their life. The rest of us should only be concerned if it has any impact on us. Keep away from the no-go areas in Brighton and you will be safe.

Ralf G says...
5:37pm Thu 13 Aug 09

What is the difference between a 'hack', and a professional journalist?

A professional journalist practices due dilligence, and will be very careful about publishing anything that sounds patently untrue without thorough research - after all, their reputation depends on it.

A hack has no reputation to speak of, and is happy to repeat any claim by the authorities verbatim, no matter how ridiculous this appears to educated readers.

I know it's the silly season, but there is no need to travel back to 1952 for your stories, Naomi..

eldub says...
5:39pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Wow. Just wow.

I've never read such utter scare-mongering nonsense in my entire life. As if a weed smoker is going to suddenly crave Heroin and seek out dealers when they've never used it before.

Do the Argus journalists actually question the garbage fed to them by the police?

Incredible.

And for the record...I own a successful business in the city, i pay a lot in tax and provide employment for 10 people. I dont drink and have no criminal record. I've never been arrested. I have never been in a fight. I have never fiddled expenses or the taxman.

I have smoked weed pretty much every day for the last 15 years. Go figure who the real criminals are...

RickH says...
7:07pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Hey - Naomi, check this out: http://www.snopes.co
m/horrors/drugs/suck
ers.asp - I expect to read all about it in tomz Argus!

ImTheDoctor says...
7:42pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Fear-mongering, that's what this is. Unless you've forgotten how to use your heads maybe you should wonder why anyone would lace weed, which is a relatively cheap drug, with heroin, which is quite expensive. Alcohol kills over 50,000 people per year, Marijuana has killed no one ever. Not in the history of man has anyone died as a result of smoking marijuana. It doesn't kill braincells, unlike alcohol and there are no addictive substances in it. Remove the crime element from marijuana and legalise it, tax it and make profit. The war on drugs is a sham. If you look at the Netherlands and see how many people are addicted to hard drugs like heroin and cocaine and compare it to the UK you'd turn your head in shame.
www.abovetheignoranc
e.org
Educate yourselves.

John Steed says...
8:11pm Thu 13 Aug 09

this sounds like some black propaganda story of a high enough calibre to have come from the pen of (john) colin wallace
unfortunatly this rumour or variations of it has rasied its ugly head many times over the last 20 years or so, drug spiked ice cream sold outside schools and all that.

only today the mirror has run an article about the dangers of spice and its expected inclusion as a a class B substance.

I have posted this before but I believe that Heroin should be prescribed free to registered addicts who attend appropriate health centres. thus removing the need for dealers, removing the need to continually commit numerous crimes to feed the habit, giving back some dignity to those women who have had to resort to the sex trade to raise money to buy gear, reducing the health dangers attached to this trade and generally increasing the security of normal people by taking the criminal side out of drug taking of this nature, addicts would then have every reason to attend health centres and would be able to be supported more. the cost to the country would be negligable compared to the massive saving by redution of crime, mental health care and vandalism
there is from countries who currently operate such schemes no evidence that free heroin leads to more users, evidence is however that pushers and drug barons lose out completly as nobody needs to buy what has become free.
sadly it is easy to believe that this story is true, but until some evidence appears i am undecided.
as a postscript colin wallace made a few seemingly wild claims that then turned out to be more fact that fiction

Mr Bear says...
8:20pm Thu 13 Aug 09

I’m more than happy to help the Argus with some investigative journalism. I suggest the Argus provide the urine soak, heroin laced, weed if you can find some, I’ll come armed with 6 mars bars and pillow.
I know many large companies like to disappoint their customer with poor customer service and products but in the very competitive market which is the B&H drug scene. Providers need to put the customer first with a quality product backed up with exception customer services or they will have a very small customer base. Possibly an uncomfortable truth for some but reality for many.

Donkey OT says...
8:30pm Thu 13 Aug 09

I can't believe the rubbish I'm reading.
Drugs are bad for you,and illegal.
Name me anybody whose life has been improved by Heroin.Muppets.

fretlessbass says...
10:31pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Donkey OT, Ringmer says...
8:30pm Thu 13 Aug 09

I can't believe the rubbish I'm reading.
Drugs are bad for you,and illegal.
Name me anybody whose life has been improved by Heroin.Muppets.

The drugs that are really bad for you are alchohol, witness the carnage on the streets at the week-end, and tobacco, think of the thousands of lung cancer deaths in this country each year. These drugs are legal. Actually pharmceutically pure heroin is relatively benign. The danger comes from the supply of heroin being controlled by criminals who adulterate it with a multitude of noxious materials.
The 'war on drugs' is a calamity perpetuated by cynical politicians seeking the vote of 'Mail' and 'Express' readers.










DdC says...
11:07pm Thu 13 Aug 09

Poppycock!

How's that war on drugs going? Brit/Mex\DeCrim
http://drugwarrant.n
et/forum/viewtopic.p
hp?p=4135#4135

Brits Copycat U.S. D.E.A.th... Are They A-Motivated?
http://forums.cannab
isculture.com/forums
/ubbthreads.php?ubb=
showthreaded&Number=
1411481#Post1411481

Brits using kidnapped kids to grow marijuana!

"At DEA, our mission is to fight drug trafficking in order to make drug abuse the most expensive, unpleasant, risky, and disreputable form of recreation a person could have."
-- Donnie Marshall,
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)

Audubon Society is all for legalizing since 98% of the US "marijuana" eradications are wild ditchweed pheasant habitat. The only crime I see is Marc selling unsterilized seeds. But Tommy Chong never made a bong and got 9 month's for lending his name. They put 8 bullets in Tom at Rainbow Farm. Take food stamps and college tuition assistance away for life and serve the Police/Prison industrial Complex. The Medical/Pharmaceutic
al\Ag Poison Complex, Fossil fools fuels, plastic and clothing, trees, paper, meat, dairy, factory farms, chemgrain and the 90 million more pounds of op resQ abortion poison, used on cotton, not hemp. The Booze and their huge infrastructure not needed for a few plants in the herb garden. $ 1 Trillion spent since 1937 = $1 Trillion profit + tax.

Legal Marijuana Would Shift Economic Power By Ron Binion Jr
http://cannabisnews.
com/news/thread24971
.shtml

Just The Facts, Please
http://www.mapinc.or
g/drugnews/v09/n770/
a03.html?102

'After Two Puffs, I Was Turned Into a Bat'
http://www.cannabisn
ews.com/news/16/thre
ad16685.shtml
Anslinger swept all before him for decades, to the extent that his success began to pose its own problems. Admitting to marijuana use became a popular way of avoiding conscription, and murderers cited the brainwashing powers of "an addictive drug which produces in its users insanity, criminality and death" to plead diminished responsibility for their crimes. Their claims were frequently supported by an expert witness, the pharmacologist Dr James Munch, who claimed that "after two puffs on a marijuana cigarette, I was turned into a bat". Sentences were commuted from death to imprisonment on Munch's evidence, and Anslinger had to ask him to stop testifying.

Nixon lied to schedule Ganja #1
http://drugwarrant.n
et/forum/viewtopic.p
hp?t=459
While Nixon Campaigned, FBI Watched John Lennon
http://drugwarrant.n
et/forum/viewtopic.p
hp?t=459

The Official Story: Debunking 'Gutter Science' Jack Herer
http://www.jackherer
.com/chapter15.html

Drugwar Lies Linked to Schizophrenia
http://tinyurl.com/2
y7hay

Variable says...
12:04am Fri 14 Aug 09

Hey Jo, you should invite Naomi to respond to the wave of agreement she's achieved in this thread.

/security word: must-push. Hysterical

Avangelist says...
10:09am Fri 14 Aug 09

Totally agree with somebody above. From a commercial aspect I just don't buy this story at all.

Seriously, what plank is going to be clipping skag into cannabis resin?

For a start think how much time that would take. You would be adding extra man hours to packaging before you can stick it into production.

Second, you would be making a loss on the heroine, you can't bump the price on your cannabis if you don't want to tell the market why it is more expensive.

Then there are the additional risk factors, smoking heroine is one of the most dangerous things to do, and considering most dedicated pot heads are skinning up most of the day, you would be accelerating the demise of your market share.

Nope, sorry, I have looked at all the angles and this is just not happening. It is right up there with razor blades in the water flume and pop rocks with cola.

puddingandpi says...
11:19am Fri 14 Aug 09

"Name me anybody whose life has been improved by Heroin."

Actually, there are several artists whose work I've liked but then they've come off heroin & their work isn't as good (eg Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Iggy Pop, Lou Reed).

But that's beside the point; this is complete crap.No-one is putting heroin in cannabis, it's an urban myth. It's like believing users put needles into bus seats - it never stands up to scrutiny because it's just not true.

johnwatson says...
11:43am Fri 14 Aug 09

Donkey OT wrote:
I can't believe the rubbish I'm reading.
Drugs are bad for you,and illegal.
Name me anybody whose life has been improved by Heroin.Muppets.
You are aware that Heroin is the trade name for diacetylmorphine, which regularly features in A&E departments as a very effective pain killer with few side effects? That heroin is used regularly to control the pain of terminal cancers? Those very many people have had their lives improved by it. Fraggle.

Randy Lahey says...
11:44am Fri 14 Aug 09

Avangelist wrote:
Totally agree with somebody above. From a commercial aspect I just don't buy this story at all. Seriously, what plank is going to be clipping skag into cannabis resin? For a start think how much time that would take. You would be adding extra man hours to packaging before you can stick it into production. Second, you would be making a loss on the heroine, you can't bump the price on your cannabis if you don't want to tell the market why it is more expensive. Then there are the additional risk factors, smoking heroine is one of the most dangerous things to do, and considering most dedicated pot heads are skinning up most of the day, you would be accelerating the demise of your market share. Nope, sorry, I have looked at all the angles and this is just not happening. It is right up there with razor blades in the water flume and pop rocks with cola.
I agree, from a business standpoint, i.e. the primary purpose of dealing, it just doesn't add up.

Seems to me like there is some underlying scaremongering going on because Sussex Police are incapable of controlling the Cannabis supply into Brighton and Hove.


Randy Lahey says...
11:52am Fri 14 Aug 09

puddingandpi wrote:
"Name me anybody whose life has been improved by Heroin." Actually, there are several artists whose work I've liked but then they've come off heroin & their work isn't as good (eg Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Iggy Pop, Lou Reed). But that's beside the point; this is complete crap.No-one is putting heroin in cannabis, it's an urban myth. It's like believing users put needles into bus seats - it never stands up to scrutiny because it's just not true.
I agree - I think extensive Heroin use should be actively encouraged for performers like Keane, Razorlight, Kaiser Chiefs, Oasis, Kate Nash, Lily Allen, Pigeo Detectives, The Kooks - it might make me want to do it less when I listen to radio 1.

brightonparty says...
12:36pm Fri 14 Aug 09

I've been smoking cannabis for the last 25 years. I sold it from ages of 15 to 28, then got out of dealing as i didn't want to be selling drugs at age 30, it wasn't the law or police that made me give up. I told the drugs squad officers back in the 80's they would be better spending their time and effort busting heroin dealers than pot dealers like me and things have only got worse since then (over 2,000 heroin addicts in Brighton and counting). For my part I continue to have a few spliff every night after I get home from running my successful company (which employs dozens of local people). I would rather be allowed to grow a few plants for my own consumption as it is I have to buy from local growers, god bless 'em.


bugmenot says...
12:54pm Fri 14 Aug 09

I recently bought a silver bracelet.

Imagine my shock to discover that it was laced with diamonds in a cynical attempt to hook me into buying another one!

Randy Lahey says...
2:17pm Fri 14 Aug 09

brightonparty wrote:
I've been smoking cannabis for the last 25 years. I sold it from ages of 15 to 28, then got out of dealing as i didn't want to be selling drugs at age 30, it wasn't the law or police that made me give up. I told the drugs squad officers back in the 80's they would be better spending their time and effort busting heroin dealers than pot dealers like me and things have only got worse since then (over 2,000 heroin addicts in Brighton and counting). For my part I continue to have a few spliff every night after I get home from running my successful company (which employs dozens of local people). I would rather be allowed to grow a few plants for my own consumption as it is I have to buy from local growers, god bless 'em.
People like you aren't the problem though - hardworking, and passive.

If you go out into town tonight, similar morons will be drowning their livers with cheap vodka based cocktails, and causing problems, cueing the media to establish that there is a problem with everyone who drinks alcohol.

The problem is we are surrounded by thick people who seem to fuel media propaganda by playing up to the stereotype.

Ban these people, not a plant!

Tye says...
3:12pm Fri 14 Aug 09

Is this story really true or is it up there with putting a hole in every 10th condom

Donkey OT says...
5:48pm Sat 15 Aug 09

Terminal cancer victims are already dying.
Sixteen year old schoolkids generally aren't.
If it's so OK why not sell it in Boots?
Heroin is Evil.
People who sell it are Evil.

johnwatson says...
6:57am Sun 16 Aug 09

Boots will sell you diamorphine if you have a prescription.

Why not learn about it by googling? A chemical is inanimate - it cannot be evil. The people who sell it are simply responding to market forces, as does your local pub landlord.

communitycriminal says...
1:54pm Mon 17 Aug 09

been a while since ive heard of this but thats what you get for keeping drugs in the hands of criminals.
you even support the police in keeping drugs illegal, so when your children become backdoor addicts youl only have your morals to blame.

thevoiceoftruth says...
2:29pm Mon 17 Aug 09

I have never read such trash in my life. This made me laugh out loud! Where is the evidence for this ridiculous story? There isn't any!

Oh, I'm sorry, the evidence comes from "Secret off-the-record discussions between police and a supplier in London". It's so top secret that the met police then rang the Argus newspaper in Brighton to tell them all about it.

I think the person that wrote this embarrassing joke of a story must be on drugs.


thomasheadley says...
5:45pm Mon 17 Aug 09

Seems like another argument to legalise cannabis to me, if it is true.

Which it probably isn't..

benjii2 says...
1:47pm Sun 23 Aug 09

I cannot believe that an article like this was printed. Not only is it disgusting that lies like this are printed, but it is more disgusting that people are still so un-educated when it comes to drugs that anybody could believe this. Heroin laced cannabis is one of the most ridiculous stories i have ever heard. The street price of heroin can be over six times that of cannabis and no matter how low people can get, nobody would want to kill thier customers just to be ridiculously out of pocket.
Whoever wrote this article should be fired. the only people who would believe this are paranoid, un-educated parents and hate mongerers who have nothing better to do with their time


DANGER DRUGS: Brighton police fear cannabis is being laced with heroin DANGER DRUGS: Brighton police fear cannabis is being laced with heroin

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