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Hearing held on salvia, penalties to be added in Assembly bill

By: Natalie Fairbanks /The Daily Cardinal  - December 7, 2007




20071207_news_salvia_story
By: Amanda Salm /The Daily Cardinal
Salvia divinorum packets (above) on the glass tabletop of a Madison store that sells the drug. There is currently a bill in the state Assembly that would allow law enforcement to confiscate the drug and give a $10,000 fine for distributing it.

The state Assembly’s Criminal Justice Committee held a hearing on Assembly Bill 477 Wednesday, which would create penalties for the drug salvia divinorum.

The bill would allow law enforcement to confiscate salvia from anyone manufacturing, distributing or delivering salvia, according to an aide to state Rep. Sheldon Wasserman, D-Milwaukee, the author of the bill.

There is no criminal penalty or imprisonment term for those who sell the drug, the aide said. The hallucinogen is currently legal in Wisconsin.

However, sellers of the drug could face fines of up to $10,000 if the bill is passed, according to state Rep. Tony Staskunas, D-West Allis, who said “the penalties are very light.”

According to Wasserman’s aide, no one testified against the bill and attending committee members seemed supportive of it.

While there is currently no criminal penalty in the bill, there is widespread concern among legislators over the safety risk posed by the drug.

“It seems to be that the use of salvia creates a very intense high,” Staskunas said.

Staskunas also said salvia users could endanger themselves and bystanders while they are hallucinating. In addition, he said the extended use of salvia could cause some long-term problems such as depression.

UW-Madison professor of Pharmacology June Dahl said drugs like salvia have psychedelic properties, which produce effects on the central nervous system that cause people to behave bizarrely.

“If someone has a history of mental illness in the family, or a genetic predisposition, experimentation with these kinds of psychedelic substances can really trigger the onset of a serious disease,” Dahl said.

According to Dahl, long-term negative effects from using the drug are largely unknown. Some salvia suppliers are concerned with the bill. “Once they make it illegal, scientists will not be able to research it anymore,” said a spokesperson for Amsterdam, a Madison store that sells the drug. According to the Amsterdam spokesperson, salvia research could help break addictions to more severe drugs.

The Amsterdam spokesperson said the store has been selling salvia for seven years to a wide demographic, though mostly older customers and has never had any problems associated with the substance.




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