November 2012 Colorado and Washington Legalize Recrecreational Use of Marijuana
Two states have passed citizen referendums legalizing the recreational use of marijuana for anyone over the age of 21: Colorado and Washington.
The Drug Free America Foundation said the measure in both states is endangering public health and safety.
Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, who opposed the measure, warned citizens that marijuana is still an illegal drug under federal law.
The Justice Department said enforcement of the federal Controlled Substances Act "remains unchanged.'' It said it is reviewing the ballot initiatives and has no additional comment at this time.
Proponents argued that legalizing and taxing marijuana would be better than costly government anti-drug efforts.
August 2012 Vermillion High School institutes Random Drug Tests
The Vermilion (Ohio) Local School Board voted to
implement a student drug testing policy for the 2012-2013 school year.
Students, parents, and community members worked together to design the
program.
Students who participate in athletics, extracurricular activities, or
purchase parking passes will be tested by Great Lakes Biomedical. The
students will be randomly given hair, saliva and urine tests, at an annual
cost of $28,000.
Students who test positive will not face disciplinary action, provided that
they attend counseling. Test results will only be seen by a designated
school official, and will not be turned over to law enforcement.
"All in all the students, at least the ones we've heard from, are in favor
of doing this. And they are positive in wanting to let us give them a suit
of armor, so that when they go to a party or when they go to someplace where
there is the availability of these substances, they can say 'I can't do this
because I might be tested,'" said Vermilion School District Superintendent
Phil Pempin.
"Operation Medicine Cabinet" and "Drug Take Back Day"

The DEA sponsors a twice-yearly unwanted
medicine take-back program in communities across the United States.
Our northeast Ohio effort, Operation Medicine Cabinet has partnered with
the DEA to offer this service in many local communities.
Visit their site at www.DEA.gov
to find the closest location.
Shake and Bake Meth is a
new and extremely dangerous form of meth production.
This "one pot" method is
produced in a two-liter soda bottle. A few cold pills are mixed with common,
but noxious, household chemicals and enough meth is produced for the user to
get a few hits.
The old meth labs required hundreds of pseudoephedrine pills, containers heated over open flames and cans of flammable liquids. The cooking process created foul odors making the labs easily detectible. They often sparked explosions.
The new method can be
done anywhere. All of the necessary items can be carried in a backpack,
making the process mobile. Drug users are making meth while driving around
in their cars, then throwing the used plastic bottles that contain a
poisonous brown and white sludge, along the highway.
If the bottle is shaken the wrong way, if any oxygen gets inside of it, or if the cap is loosened too quickly, the bottle can explode into a giant fireball.
August 3, 2011 Nursing Mom charged with Murder
Maggie Jean Wortmon, a 26 year old mother from Loleta, near San Francisco, CA, was charged with second-degree murder, child abuse and involuntary manslaughter in Humboldt County.July 29, 2011 Belvidere Adopts Random Drug Testing for Middle School
Middle school students in Belvidere, NJ
will be entered into a voluntary random drug testing program. Parents
must consent. If a test returns positive for drugs or alcohol, the
student will be required to have six visits to the nurse or counselor ,
along with attendance in an early intervention program. Parents would
cover the cost of treatment needed.
Since 2008, high school students have been enrolled in this program.
They must agree to the program to participate in athletics,
extracurricular activities or to obtain a parking permit.
According to Superintendent Swaneveld, the goal, is ""Hopefully it works
as a deterrent and to help kids, as opposed to it being punitive.
May 18, 2011 Seven-year-old gives Heroin to Friends at School
A Carrick, PA Elementary school teacher
found 18 stamp bags in a student's backpack and locker.
The child told Pittsburgh police officers that he got the 18 stamped
bags from his father's bedroom. The boy gave the heroin to three of his
friends. The parents of the three contacted the school district after
seeing the white packets named "Magic Ticket" that showed a bunny coming
out of a hat.
April 30, 2011 Operation Medicine Cabinet joins the DEA for a National Prescription Drug Take Back Day.
Drug Awareness and Prevention Inc. has organized
take-back events in over 100 cities in northeast Ohio, in partnership
with local drug task forces, police departments, community groups and
health boards.
“I have too often seen the devastating effects on our young people who
are abusing pharmaceutical medications. OMC affords us a proactive
opportunity to not only dispose of these very dangerous unused drugs
safely, but also to educate our residents of the seriousness of this
issue,” said SAIC Jeff Capretto of the Westshore Enforcement Bureau Drug
Task Force.
“In 2007, unintentional drug poisoning became the leading cause of
injury death in Ohio, surpassing motor vehicle crashes and suicide for
the first time on record,” said Vince Caraffi, Cuyahoga County Board of
Health.
"Generation RX believes medications prescribed by a doctor to another
family member are a safe way to get high. They are wrong.” said Nancy
Pommerening, the director of Drug Awareness and Prevention Inc.
“Medicine take-back programs also help to protect the environment, by
providing a safe way to dispose of prescription drugs before they enter
the water supply or leach from landfills.”
November 30, 2010 One in Three Fatally Injured Drivers Tested Positive for Drugs
The National Highway Transportation Safety
Administration has reported that in 2009, when drug tests were
administered after fatal motor vehicle accidents, results have shown the
presence of drugs in one out of three cases. Data analysis shows the
presence of narcotics, depressants, stimulants, cannabinoids
(marijuana), hallucinogens (PCP), anabolic steroids, and inhalants.
Deliberately excluded were alcohol, nicotine, aspirin, and drugs
administered after the crash.
"It is critical that communities across the Nation address the threat of
drugged driving as we redouble our efforts to make America's roadways
safer by increasing public awareness, employing more targeted
enforcement, and developing better tools to detect the presence of drugs
among drivers,” said Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control
Policy.
October 3, 2010 OPERATION MEDICINE
CABINET & DEA DRUG TAKE BACK DAY A HUGE SUCCESS
The Drug Enforcement Administration, in partnership with the eight
County Sheriff’s Offices, WEB, Lorain, SEALE, and Medway Drug Task
Forces in northeast Ohio, local police departments, Drug Awareness and
Prevention Inc., and many other local organizations, held its first
jointly-organized Operation: Medicine Cabinet & DEA National
Prescription Drug Take Back Day on Saturday, September 25, 2010 from
10:00 am to 2:00 pm.
Together, the partners helped residents in northeast Ohio safely dispose
of outdated or unwanted prescription medications.
According to RAIC Gene Corley, “The exact poundage was 9,545 pounds, and
covered the following counties: Ashland, Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga,
Holmes, Lake, Lorain, Medina, Richland, Stark, Summit and Wayne.”
“This very successful collection event reduced one of the primary
sources of abused prescription medicines for many of northeast Ohio’s
young people.” said Nancy Pommerening, the director of Drug Awareness
and Prevention Inc. “We would like to thank the residents who
participated. They also helped to protect the environment by safely
disposing of prescription drugs before they enter our water supply.”
May 12, 2010 Operation:
Medicine Cabinet a Success
On May 8th, over 2,600 pounds of prescription medicine was collected at
42 locations in five Ohio Counties: Cuyahoga, Lorain, Medina, Wayne and
Holmes. With the cooperation of local police departments, the Cuyahoga
and Lorain County Sheriff's Department, the Westshore Enforcement
Bureau, S.E.A.L.E. and Medway Drug Task forces safely removed unwanted
or expired prescription medicines from their communities.
Operation Medicine Cabinet, a plan to collect unused or expired
medicines, is coming to Cuyahoga, Lorain and Medina Counties on May 8,
2010. For drop off locations and details - updated daily,Click here
One in five young people has abused a prescription pain killer found in
a family member's medicine cabinet. In recent years, unintentional drug
poisoning has become one of the leading causes of accidental death. It
is time to get these drugs out of our homes.
November 22, 2009 "Pharm Party" in the U.S.A.
As parents, we would like to protect our children
from all of life’s dangers. Children have always been willing to ignore
safety, and do daring things with their friends. (Remember
Double-Dog-Dare-You?)
The newest double-dare fad for teenagers is the “Pharm Party.” Teens
acquire medicines from family or friends’ medicine cabinets, take them
to a Pharm Party, and dump them in a bowl. Partygoers grab a handful,
swallow them, and wait for a reaction. The Ohio Department of Health
reported that in 2007, unintentional drug poisoning was the leading
cause of injury death in Ohio, surpassing motor vehicle accidents for
the first time.
According to Commander Burke, of the Warren County Drug Task Force, the
medicine cabinet is the primary source of drugs for 12, 13, and 14 year
olds. He said they don’t understand that it’s like playing Russian
Roulette.
At night, before you go to bed, you lock your front door to protect your
family from danger. Today, you need to take a similar precaution with
medications and dangerous inhalants, derived from solvent-based
chemicals.
We believe a good solution is to install a lock on one your cabinets or
closets, similar to the one on your front door, for safe and convenient
storage of medicines and chemicals. This small investment could keep
your children, and their friends safe during their risk-taking years.
October 15, 2009 Ohio Proposes Testing
for Dollars
Senator Tim Schaffer (Lancaster) introduced Ohio Senate Bill 178 on
September 30, 2009. It would establish a drug-testing requirement for
adults who apply for Ohio need-based programs that provide cash ,
medical, housing , food or energy assistance. The urine sample would be
tested for the presence of "controlled substances" without a doctor's
prescription. Any individual refusing the drug test, or testing positive
would need to wait for 30 days before re-applying to state agencies.
Co-sponsoring the bill was Senator Tim Grendell (Chesterland).
July 23, 2009
Tasting the Rainbow? Florida Drug Store finds Cocaine with Skittles
A young boy found a 1.2 gram package of cocaine in a box of Skittles on
the shelf of a Florida CVS drug store.
CVS spokesperson, Mike De Angelis, said a review of the security cameras
offered no clues to the mysterious cocaine.
At this time, the Sheriff's Office in Clay County cannot find enough
evidence to continue an investigation as to the source.
May 31, 2009 Ohio's Suburbs and Rural
Areas are the new Heroin Market
Dana Smith lost one of her three heroin-addicted
sons to an overdose. Her son, Arthur was found dead in the upstairs
bathroom next to a hypodermic needle. In a rare federal prosecution, the
drug dealers Jose Manuel Cazeras-Contreras, and Victor Delgadillo Parra
were tried and convicted of manslaughter. Parra was given a 16-1/2 year
federal sentence.
Prosecuting drug dealers for murder under Ohio law is very uncommon.
During the last several years, heroin-related deaths have spread into 18
new Ohio counties. In Ohio, Mexican drug cartels have taken over the
distribution of heroin from the Columbians and Dominicans.
The cartels are pushing Mexican "black tar heroin, ... a very powerful
form of heroin," reports Randal C. Archibold from the New York Times.
February 19, 2009 "Heroin Highway" to Dayton, Ohio
Dayton Police Sergeant John Sullivan places
heroin as the number one drug attracting non-residents. Crack cocaine is
the drug of choice for residents.
Regional police have become increasingly concerned that Dayton, Ohio has
become a magnet that attracts heroin users from all over the state.
According to Kim Reiher, a St. Mary's officer, "Typically, heroin
addicts have progressed from other drugs."$25 is the going rate for a
hit in the city.
Reiher states that 75% of the crime in the city is attributable to the
drug trade.
Reiher also warned of the dangers of going to urban areas seeking drugs.
She said that drug dealers are opportunists who will take advantage of
anyone at any time.
September 3, 2008 Los Angeles, Ca. Another Hollywood star arrested with cocaine and heroin.
Mackenzie Phillips was arrested in Los Angeles,
and charged with cocaine and heroin possession, according to Reuters
News Service. After going through airport security, police found a
"small amount" of drugs packaged in balloons and plastic bags. Phillips,
48 was also charged with unauthorized possession of a hypodermic needle
Phillips was a star of the former television series, "One Day at a
Time."
August 17, 2008 Portland, Oregon A
Memoir of the Downward Spiral of Addiction
According to The Oregonian, David Carr has written a memoir titled "The
Night of the Gun: A Reporter Investigates the Darkest Story of His Life.
His Own." His story is an addiction memoir about a smart, suburban boy
following a typical progression. He went from pothead to crack addict in
a few years. His story includes arrests, rehab attempts, horror stories
and lives he ruined. He hit bottom when he was smoking crack with his
pregnant girlfriend. Her water broke. He has turned his life around, and
now writes for the New York times.
Interesting story? Please send it in, along with attribution and source to: Info@DrugAwarenessAndPrevention.org
Drug Take Back Event 2011 North Royalton, Ohio

DEA Cleveland warehouse with collected drugs for northeast Ohio

Sampling of Home Drug Test Kits

Heroin needle, black tar herion, crack, drug tools
Officer MacKenzie, Westlake Ohio Drug Take Back Event

2005 Walsh, et al. Drugged Driving breakdown (Israel)
Cleveland 1st District - Pills collected at Operation Medicine Cabinet

"Pharm" Party

Woman shooting heroin.