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Poppy Tea Tied to Two Deaths in Colo.
July 26, 2009

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News Summary

Two young residents of Boulder, Colo., recently died after drinking tea made from the pods of opium poppies, the source plant for heroin and other opiate drugs.

The Boulder Camera reported July 21 that Jeffery Joseph Bohan, 19, was  found dead after a night of drinking poppy-pod tea; toxicology tests in the incident are still pending. In February, 20-year-old Alex McGuiggan died in a similar incident; the coroner's office later determined that he had ingested a fatal amount of opium from drinking poppy-pod tea.

"Poppy-pod tea is an opiate; it is dangerous," said Jeanette Cunning of the Boulder County Drug Task Force. "It seems like people think it's pretty harmless. But it's not an extremely well-known drug, and people don't really know the effects of it yet."

The pods, which are legal to possess, can be ordered on the internet, including eBay. But ingesting them is illegal. The tea is said to be bitter, but users say it causes feeling of relaxation. "The problem is, people are probably making (the tea) themselves and don't know how strong it is," said Boulder-area resident Robert Hewitt, 22.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Carolyn on 27 Jul 09 05:09 PM EDT
I don't get it...this stuff is legal to possess but it's illegal to ingest it? What else are you going to do with it, hang it on the wall or put it on a shelf for decorative purposes? This is absurd. It also goes to show you that people will experiment with anything to try to get high. I suppose it's part of human nature.

Posted by Anonymous on 27 Jul 09 08:29 PM EDT
1. One gets the impression they were worried they would "miss something" so kept going further and further into acute overdose. An effect of the "culture" which challenges you to prove you're a tough guy by taking enough to feel an impact. 2. Perspective: compare these two cases with 20,000 highway homicides (or suicides) a year caused by "experimenting" with alcohol. Priorities, anyone? P.S. One (1) young man allegedly died after smoking Salvia divinorum and several states banned the herb.

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