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Legalize Marijuana, Says Inventor of 'Spice' Chemicals
Legalize Marijuana, Says
Inventor of 'Spice'
Chemicals John W.
Huffman
Says Real Pot
Is Less
Dangerous
Than Fake
Pot
When John W.
Huffman invented a whole class of
chemicals that mimic the effect of
marijuana on the human brain, he never
intended for them to launch a whole "legal
marijuana" industry.
But now that "Spice" and other forms of
imitation pot are sending users to
emergency rooms across America, the
retired professor has an idea of how to
stem the epidemic. If the federal
government would legalize the real thing,
says Huffman, maybe consumers wouldn't
turn to the far more dangerous fake stuff.
Huffman, who developed more than 400
"cannabinoids" as an organic chemist at
Clemson University, says that marijuana has
the benefit of being a known quantity, and
not a very harmful one. We know the
biological effects of THC, the active
ingredient in marijuana, Huffman told ABC
News, because they have been thoroughly
studied. "The scientific evidence is that it's
not a particularly dangerous drug," said
Huffman.
WATCH an interview with John W. Huffman.
The "JWH" class of compounds that
Huffman invented to mimic marijuana's
effects, meanwhile, have not been tested
the same way. "The physiological
compounds effects of [JWH] compounds
have never been examined in humans,"
said Huffman. What we do know, he says, is
that "it doesn't hit the brain in the same
way as marijuana, and that's why it's
dangerous."
While they are known to elevate blood
pressure -- unlike marijuana -- and to cause
increased heart rate and anxiety, to date
most of the evidence of their effects is
anecdotal, and comes from things like visits
to emergency rooms. "There have been a
number of people who've committed
suicide after using them," said Huffman.
Huffman began working on the
cannabinoids in the early 1990s using a
grant from the National Institute for Drug
Abuse. He published academic papers that
gave information on the chemical steps to
make the compounds, including JWH-018,
one of the easiest of the class to make and
the one most often found in Spice products.
"JWH-018 can be made by a halfway
decent undergraduate chemistry major,"
said Huffman, "in three steps using
commercially available materials."
In 2008, says Huffman, someone sent him
an article from the German magazine Der
Spiegel about a young man using the JWH
chemicals to get high. He subsequently
learned that the "imitation marijuana"
drugs based on his chemicals had popped
up in Europe in 2006, not long after he'd
published a paper describing how to make
the compounds. The compounds were also
being used commercially in South Korea as
a plant growth product, and Huffman
speculates that they migrated from there to
China, where they are now being
manufactured for use in Spice.
"I figured that somewhere along the line,
some enterprising individual would try to
smoke it," said Huffman. He didn't figure
that it would become a global industry.
Anyone who ingests it recreationally,
Huffman stressed, is "foolish" and playing
"Russian Roulette," and the head shop
owners who are selling it know what they
are doing. "They can read the newspapers,
they can watch TV," said Huffman. "They
know what's in it. And I think they're
exploiting the young people who buy
them." A representative of a head shop
trade group told ABC News that the
products should be regulated but not
outlawed.
Prohibition Doesn't Work, Says Huffman
Huffman, who opposes prohibition in
general, doubts that a ban on the
substances will keep kids away from it. "We
declared marijuana illegal in 1937. The
federal government passed the law. Now,
that really did a lot of good to keep people
from smoking marijuana, didn't it?"
Huffman said that making all the JWH
compounds illegal would probably have
similar results, but emphasizes that any
decision to legalize JWH compounds should
hinge on a thorough study of how they
affect humans. The DEA currently bans five
cannabinoids, including JWH-018 and one
other JWH chemical, but Congress is
weighing a more sweeping ban.
Huffman does believes marijuana should be
legalized, since its effects are known. "It
should be sold only to people 21 and
older. It should be heavily, heavily taxed."
One of the benefits of decriminalizing
marijuana, he said, would be diminishing
the allure of its more dangerous
substitutes.
"I talked to a marijuana provider from
California, a doctor, a physician," explained
Huffman, "and he said that in California,
that these things are not near the problem
they are in the rest of the country simply
because they can get marijuana. And
marijuana, even for recreational use is
quite easy to get in California, and it's
essentially decriminalized. And marijuana is
not nearly as dangerous as these
compounds."
The trouble with trying to keep people from
using drugs like Spice, said Huffman, is that
"people are going to do what they're going
to do," even if some kid is spending "$25
bucks on a bag of green stuff, and he
doesn't know what's in it, and he doesn't
know what it does."
"You can't tell a 17-year-old anything,
because they consider that they're
immortal."
Legalize Marijuana, Says
Inventor of 'Spice'
Chemicals
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