Federal authorities will halt the sale of the powerful and dangerous synthetic stimulants known as bath salts.
The Drug Enforcement Administration’s emergency ban on the powdery drugs, often sold on the Internet or in convenience stores, will last at least a year. Meanwhile, officials will decide whether the substances should be outlawed permanently, ABC News reports. The action takes effect in 30 days.
Many states already have banned bath salts. They have been marketed under names such as White Lightning, Snow Leopard, Tranquility, Zoom, Ivory Wave, Red Dove, Bliss and Vanilla Sky. Widely used among young people, the drugs have been described as mimicking the effects of cocaine, LSD and methamphetamine.
“This imminent action by the DEA demonstrates that there is no tolerance for those who manufacture, distribute, or sell these drugs anywhere in the country, and that those who do will be shut down, arrested, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart said in a statement.
The move follows a call earlier this year by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., for a nationwide ban against bath salts. In the past year, states have scrambled to bar the stimulants. They have been linked to feelings of paranoia, hallucinations and violent behavior, and have prompted thousands of calls to poison control centers around the country.
TIMOTHY BELLA
Related Posts:
Amid Nationwide Scare, New York Bans ‘Bath Salts’ Stimulants
States Scramble to Pull the Plug on ‘Bath Salts’ Drugs


