Forums › Drugs › Cocaine & Crack › Sniffing out a fruit-flavored trend in cocaine
MSNBC and NBC News
April 17, 2008
Federal drug agents say candy-flavored cocaine is a new and troubling development and are hoping to keep it from spreading to the rest of the country after its recent emergence in California.
Drug rings have occasionally sold cocaine mixed with candy powder, but investigators said the new product was significantly more sophisticated and lucrative. Cocaine cut with an added flavoring is less potent, but the 1½ pounds seized last month were a full-strength powder into which strawberry, coconut, lemon and cinnamon flavoring had been chemically synthesized.
The flavored cocaine would command $1,100 to $1,400 an ounce on the street, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said after DEA agents and state investigators seized the flavored drugs at two homes in Modesto, Calif. Regular powder cocaine, by comparison, fetches $600 to $700 an ounce, the agency said.
Three people were arrested in connection with what DEA agents called “a significant organization.” Two of them, believed to be the ringleaders, could face five to 40 years in prison if convicted.Gordon Taylor, the DEA’s assistant special agent in charge of the investigation, called the emergence of the candy-flavored cocaine especially disturbing because it suggested that manufacturers and pushers were developing more sophisticated techniques to appeal to children and teenagers.
“Attempting to lure new, younger customers to a dangerous drug by adding candy flavors is an unconscionable marketing technique,” Taylor said. He said it was vital that law enforcement authorities work together quickly to shut down operations that could spread the new drug to other parts of the country.
Taylor and other DEA agents said their next steps would be critical, as the flavored drug, apparently intended to appeal to children and women, had not been seen elsewhere in the country.
‘My daughter would take it’
“I think it’s entirely reprehensible,” police Sgt. Dave Hatfield of Cathedral City, Calif., said of the flavored cocaine. “It’s already a scourge on our society to begin with.”
Jai Barajas, who lives near Palm Springs, Calif., said: “If someone gave it to your child, what would you think? My daughter would take it. She would think it’s candy. She would taste it if it’s powdered.”
Drug dealers and street pushers have long disguised powder and rock cocaine by dyeing it or concealing it in candy wrappers. Police in Virginia, for example, arrested a New Jersey man in February after seizing about 4½ pounds of cocaine hidden in lollipop, chocolate and toffee wrappers.
:you_crazy:you_crazy IMO if I take charlie (and dont really like it to be honest)
I take it to get fucked up and dont give a fuck what it ‘tastes’ like……
Cocaine tastes like strawberry’s now? I’m gonna try it!
i used to get srawberry and chockolate ket a few years back … i have a sneeky suspition it was boshed with nesquick tho .. still was a nice gimik and was well strong so didn’t mind :laugh_at:
IME most American “candy” is rank. Adding this chemically synthesised rubbish to cocaine would just make me feel somewhat ill when I snorted it :yakk:
TBH I suspect the reality is someone who works in a commercial chemical plant was moonlighting and using work equipment / supplies to make cocaine, and some stuff got contaminated.
The yanks don’t want to admit their best brains are involved in this sort of malarkey, so they spin the story into how some “evil dealers” are trying to corrupt the kids.
kids are growing up so fast anyway some of them would and do consume drugs even in their last years of junior school, no matter how rank the substances may taste.
Last years of junior school? I went to a pretty rough as fuck school, but still the worst cases started class A drug use in year 8 (12/13 – the rest of us started smoking a bit of weed around the same time)… junior school is 7-11… that would surprise me and really worry me if someone is taking drugs at primary school.
when I lived in Reading there were certainly some youths I knew (then aged 16-19) who had started actually taking a drug of some sort (most commonly cannabis but in at least one case amfetamines) from age 11 upwards.
In many cases I also knew their older siblings or even their parents and the kids weren’t bullshitting – Down South kids may have a bit more pocket money and often their parents may be users/dealers themselves and a lot more tolerant than my parents generation were..
also in some parts of East Anglia we have middle schools here where kids start at age 7 and leave at 13/14 where the teens are going to want to behave like their older friends
one reason why “Norfolk’s” scene burned out is that people are actually starting full on partying at a very early age, from 11-14 in some cases, particularly younger girls who have older friends. By the time some people in their early 20s they actually have done it all and seen it all, and many of the girls are themselves mothers.
This has however been going on for some years in the South East (in fact some of the early 1980s party promoters have found themselves nicked and on the nonce list!)
I remember the Times (of all places!) reporting on this phenomenon in 1989 or so about how men in their 20s or even 30s were “innocently” hanging around with way younger girls (aged 12-17 mostly) and taking them to “warehouse parties”. They claimed there was no “naughty stuff” involved (yeah, right). Amazingly, it wasn’t even a particularly hostile article, seems that the media was genuinely being naive that time!
now this has been quite rightly clamped down on, but this also means that with situations like illegal raves (which are known to attract people <18 due to the lack of age verification!) the feds can use child protection laws to get all sorts of info from the net and other sources and overrule a lot of privacy rights..
That’s just terrible..
Would have stopped me taking cocaine long before I did :yakk:
The thing that gets me with this article, Is that It seems its more of an assumption that the flavour has been added to attract more “children” to buying it.
Surely It would be more desirable to adults too. Kids aint the only ones that like strawberry sherbert! :yakk:
Also, what has this part got to do with the article at all?
Drug dealers and street pushers have long disguised powder and rock cocaine by dyeing it or concealing it in candy wrappers. Police in Virginia, for example, arrested a New Jersey man in February after seizing about 4½ pounds of cocaine hidden in lollipop, chocolate and toffee wrappers.
If someone got caught stashing guns in celebration boxes, would that be added to the article too? :you_crazy
It seems to me that this story needed bulking up a little, and the news teams have a vivid imagination.
they don’t need to, you can probably legally buy “My First Firearm” for 8 year old kids from Walmart out there with smaller trigger grips and less recoil for tiny hands… :you_crazy
“hey! a Real Gun! just like Pop has!”
Taking drugs that early is rare, but it does happen. I know that the youngest person in the UK to register for drug rehabilitation was 6.
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Forums › Drugs › Cocaine & Crack › Sniffing out a fruit-flavored trend in cocaine