AltWeeklies Wire

Heroin Use on the Rise in Wisconsinnew

Heroin has always had a presence in southeastern Wisconsin, and there have always been some hardcore users in the area. But things changed in the 1990s, when Colombian cocaine traffickers saw the profits that Asian producers were making on heroin, primarily China White.
Shepherd Express  |  Lisa Kaiser  |  09-26-2008  |  Drugs

A Battle of the Bong in Massachusettsnew

As the state's fiercest civic power brokers are quickly finding out, the war over Question 2 is not your typical suits vs. stoners scrum.
Boston Phoenix  |  Chris Faraone  |  09-25-2008  |  Drugs

Clayton Roueche, the Last King of Potlandnew

In the typically futile annals of the War on Drugs, the takedown of a Canadian scrap dealer's son was a major score.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  09-15-2008  |  Drugs

Adderall Treats ADHD, but It Can Lead to Addictionnew

Adderall has joined Oxycontin, Vicodin and many more prescription drugs that SouthCoast Recovery counselors deal with -- in addition to traditional street drugs such as cocaine, heroin and meth. Down economy? The recovery business is booming.
OC Weekly  |  Matt Coker  |  09-02-2008  |  Drugs

The Experimental Drug Treatment Prometa Fights Fire with Firenew

Does an unproven treatment that combats drug addiction with drugs promise more than it can deliver?
Dallas Observer  |  Megan Feldman  |  08-18-2008  |  Drugs

Canada's Most Picturesque Province is Also the Center of an Underground Pot Explosionnew

Prince Edward Island is still largely a bastion of clean-cut, yesteryear values. A number of island communities remain defiantly dry. But it is also home to a thriving cottage industry that includes both indoor hydroponic pot production, and a more daring coterie of growers who take advantage of the island's perfect summer climate and endless fields of spuds, soybeans, and corn to pursue small-scale cultivation en plein air.
Boston Phoenix  |  Alan R. Earls  |  08-14-2008  |  Drugs

Medical Marijuana Dealer Convicted on Federal Trafficking Chargesnew

Charles Lynch was found guilty in federal court on five charges related to growing and distributing marijuana, despite California law that authorized his business, and testimony by local officials who welcomed the dispensary.
San Luis Obispo New Times  |  Kylie Mendonca  |  08-11-2008  |  Drugs

A Safe Space for Gay Meth Addicts in Santa Ana Struggles to Get Goingnew

If you visit Metheds.org, all you'll see is a white page, black text and a brief explanation: "Metheds. A place about recovery and community. Opening soon in Santa Ana. For more information, contact Ed McKie." But that's all Metheds is right now: an idea, some wishful thinking and a name.
OC Weekly  |  Vickie Chang  |  08-05-2008  |  Drugs

Blunt Truth: Ten Years in the Life of a Local Drug Dealernew

Seems like a lot of us are buying weed. So I ask you, how well do you know your dealer? How well do you know what he goes through? (How much do you really want to know?) Meet "Mr. Dealer" -- he's 26 years old and has been selling weed for over 10 years.
C-Ville Weekly  |  J. Tobias Beard  |  07-30-2008  |  Drugs

Salvia D: The Tempest in a Tea Leafnew

Indigenous people use this Mexican plant for medicinal purposes, which has researchers touting its healing potential. Others smoke it for a legal high, which has legislators itching to regulate. What's to keep Salvia D from being the drug war's next casualty?
Missoula Independent  |  Patrick M. Klemz  |  07-22-2008  |  Drugs

Illinois Gov's Cuts to Drug-Treatment Programs Will Have Wide-Reaching Effectsnew

Under Blago's ax, drug-treatment centers around the state will lose $55 million in state funds. This amount might sound like pocket change in the context of the state's big fat coffers. To the network of drug-treatment service providers, however, it's about half of their budget -- and that's just the first domino of many that will fall.
Illinois Times  |  Dusty Rhodes  |  07-21-2008  |  Drugs

A New Bill Introduced Rethinks Drug-free School Zonesnew

With the densest population in the country, New Jersey's cities are almost completely consumed by drug-free school zones. The result is that nearly every offender convicted under the law--an astounding 96 percent--was either black or Hispanic.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Daniel McQuade  |  07-14-2008  |  Drugs

Virginia Criminalizes Salvia, Nobody Noticesnew

At midnight July 1, Salvia Divinorum, the mind altering Mexican plant whose use by teenagers has been sweeping the nation (or so says some media), officially became illegal, giving some Virginians out there a cool, new, felony-level, drug-using past.
C-Ville Weekly  |  J. Tobias Beard  |  07-09-2008  |  Drugs

The Feds Cry Wolf on Pot Potency (Again)new

The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) trumpeted its most recent report on increased marijuana potency in the starkest language possible. But there's no evidence that more potent marijuana is any more dangerous for users.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Daniel McQuade  |  06-30-2008  |  Drugs

Dr. Joycelyn Elders: Legalize Medical Marijuananew

Now almost 75, this sharecroppers' daughter from Arkansas continues to lecture across the country on sex education, universal health care and public health approaches to dealing with illegal drugs.
INDY Week  |  Fiona Morgan  |  06-25-2008  |  Drugs

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