But as attitudes and state laws change regarding marijuana—and as its use increases—reports of marijuana laced with substances such as the synthetic opioid fentanyl are also increasing.
“One of the trends that we saw secondary to the pandemic was individuals stopped reporting opioid use as their primary drug of choice, and it seems to be replaced with marijuana and methamphetamine,” Teresa Russell, director of criminal justice outreach in Dayton, Ohio, told The Epoch Times. Russell works with the county jail and community health and treatment facilities.
Russell explained that when someone is booked into the jail and needs to detox, they’re asked about drugs they’ve taken and must take a urine drug screen. Russell said it’s becoming increasingly common for someone to say they’ve only used marijuana but then test positive for fentanyl.
“They genuinely don’t know that [opioids are] in there,” Russell said. “They have no idea what’s actually being put inside their substances. That’s an ongoing trend of what we’re seeing.”
When explicitly asked whether marijuana is being laced with fentanyl and showing up on drug screens, Russell confirmed that’s what she’s seeing.
“We hear that not just from my team here in the jail from our intake screens, but we’re hearing that from our outreach partners.”
NORML, a nonprofit public-interest advocacy group pushing for the legalization of marijuana, is quick to downplay the issue of fentanyl-laced marijuana.
“It’s controversial,” Russell said of fentanyl-laced marijuana, “but I have urine drug screens that show it.”
Cases
On Feb. 10, two students at North Mac High School in Illinois were found to be in possession and under the influence of marijuana, and two field tests administered by the Virden Police Department found that the marijuana was positive for fentanyl.“This needs to serve as a notice to all individuals who are purchasing drugs. Drugs can take your life immediately or will control you and eventually destroy your life and everything you care about,” Irwin said.
Increasing Prevalence
According to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that’s primarily manufactured in countries such as China and then smuggled into the United States via Mexico.“There is significant risk that illegal drugs have been intentionally contaminated with fentanyl.”
“I remember the first few times years ago that we started seeing overdoses happen with things like cocaine, and fentanyl was cut into things like cocaine, and we’re like: ‘There’s no way. Why would you ever put fentanyl in cocaine?’
“I have been doing this professionally for over a decade, and I didn’t believe it. I said, ‘That doesn’t even make sense logically.’ You know, if a user is going to get cocaine and go up, the last thing they want to do is go down.
“It’s similar with cannabis. If you have someone going for cannabis, and they’re hoping to smoke weed, the last thing they want to do is use one of the most potent opiates on the planet. But that’s what’s happening.”
“Dealers have found that because of how addictive fentanyl is, and how potent it is, they start putting it in these other substances, and it’s very, very cheap to do, and they’re able to, one, get more bang for their buck, two, potentially hook users, and, three, find themselves in a position where the folks that like it are coming back for more.”
Barker added that although a majority of street dealers aren’t cutting marijuana with fentanyl, it’s still a growing problem.
“The problem with fentanyl is that it’s really Russian roulette,” he said.
“So even if the majority of the time you’re buying weed on the streets you’re not getting weed laced with fentanyl, if there’s even that small chance that it could happen—and you happen to be the person that gets it—the old scary horror stories about drug abuse, ‘you do it one time, and you’re going to die,’ that didn’t really use to be true 20 years ago, unfortunately, those clichés have become true.”
In addition to New Life House, recovery centers nationwide are trying to raise awareness about the growing prevalence of fentanyl-laced weed.
1st Drug
“We were really lied to as a society,” said Barker, who’s been in recovery for years and previously voted to legalize marijuana.“And that’s why this stuff has just been pushed through time and time again, state by state by state, without resistance. And now we’re seeing that there’s just a lot of unintended consequences that nobody was aware of. Whether we were deliberately misinformed or whether we just didn’t have the data. But now that the data has come out, we’ve chosen not to act because there’s too much money behind [legalizing marijuana].
“Regardless of what the mainstream media will tell you, cannabis is a gateway drug. I have tremendous amounts of anecdotal evidence from being in this industry for a long time to support that. Talk to anyone with substance abuse issues and ask them what the first substance they used that kind of broke down the taboos and exposed them to that world, and 99.99 percent of them are going to say cannabis.”