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File #: 0289X-2011    Version: 1
Type: Ceremonial Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 10/11/2011 In control: Public Safety & Judiciary Committee
On agenda: 10/17/2011 Final action:
Title: To urge the United States Congress to permanently ban mephedrone, methlenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV), and methylone, all key ingredients for “bath salts."
Sponsors: Michelle M. Mills
Title
To urge the United States Congress to permanently ban mephedrone, methlenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV), and methylone, all key ingredients for “bath salts."
Body
WHEREAS, synthetic stimulants (chemicals) that are marketed at “bath salts” are often found in a number of retail products; and

WHEREAS, many of these retail products are sold over the Internet, in convenience stores, and at gas stations; and

WHEREAS, bath salts, which have become increasingly popular, particularly among teens and young adults, are ingested by sniffing and snorting, taken orally, smoked, or put into a solution and injected into veins; and

WHEREAS, the American Association of Poison Control Centers has reported that between January 1 and August 31 of this year 4,720 calls were made to poison centers about exposure to bath salts compared with 303 calls for all of 2010; and

WHEREAS, these synthetic stimulants act as central nervous system stimulants causing rapid heart rate (which may lead to heart attacks and strokes), chest pains, nosebleeds, sweating, nausea, and vomiting; and

WHEREAS, people who abuse these substances have reported agitation, insomnia, irritability, dizziness, depression, paranoia, delusions, suicidal thoughts, seizures, panic attacks, impaired perception of reality, reduced motor control, and decreased ability to think clearly; and

WHEREAS, police are alarmed by the paranoia and often-violent hallucinations that people who use the drugs experience; and

WHEREAS, these products are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for any reason and; and

WHEREAS, they are marketed in a manner so as to mask their intended purpose in an attempt to circumvent the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 and the Controlled Substance Analogue Enforcement Act of 1986; and

WHEREAS, today marks the day that Ohio will add six derivatives of cathinone that have been found in bath salts to its list of Schedule 1 controlled hallucinogenic substances; and

WHEREAS, on September ...

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