Attorney
General Mike DeWine
DeWine
Takes Criminal, Civil Action
Against Synthetic Drug Crimes
(SPRINGFIELD,
Ohio) – Ohio Attorney
General Mike DeWine announced today that state and local law
enforcement served
five search warrants in three counties this morning as part of an
intensified
effort to stop the sale of synthetic drugs.
The
warrants, served in Clark,
Montgomery, and Guernsey counties, came as a result of a series of
investigations that uncovered synthetic cannabinoids, also known as
synthetic
marijuana or herbal incense, being sold in three Ohio stores. The
investigation
included a dozen law enforcement agencies, led by the Clark County
Sheriff's
Office, BCI, and the Ohio Attorney General's Office.
Attorney
General DeWine has made
eliminating synthetic drugs a priority and sent a warning letter to
retailers
in November advising them of the risks of continuing to sell synthetic
drugs.
"We
gave business owners fair
warning that if we found synthetic drugs in their stores that there
would be
consequences, and now we are following through with that promise," said
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine as he stood outside the Quality Food
Market
in New Carlisle.
Local
authorities, along with
agents from the Attorney General's Bureau of Criminal Investigation
(BCI),
served a search warrant at the Clark County business and at the
Montgomery
County home of the store's owner.
The
owner was arrested and charged with three felony counts of Trafficking
in a
Controlled Substance.
Warrants
in two separate cases were
also served in Guernsey County at Bubby's Drive Thru in Byesville and
at Party
Time Carryout and its owner's home, both in Cambridge.
"Some
of the drugs found in
these investigations came in packaging designed with superhero images,
which
demonstrates that these drugs are being marketed toward our children,"
said Attorney General DeWine. "We
need to do everything we can to protect our families, and that is why
we decided
to take this action one step further and file civil lawsuits against
those
involved."
The
lawsuits, filed against the
three businesses by those with the Attorney General's Consumer
Protection
Section, allege that the defendants engaged in unfair, deceptive, and
unconscionable acts by selling illegal drugs as legal products.
Attorneys
also filed nuisance
abatements against the businesses, requesting that the stores be closed
for one
year.
Those
with the Attorney General's
Special Prosecutions Unit, and the RANGE Taskforce, Clark County
Sheriff's
Office, Montgomery County Sheriff's Office, Guernsey County Sheriff's
Office,
Clark County Prosecutor's Office, Montgomery County Prosecutor's
Office,
Guernsey County Prosecutor's Office, Ohio Board of Pharmacy, Columbus
Field
Division of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives,
and Drug
Enforcement Administration participated in the investigations.
A
synthetic drug provision to House
Bill 334 also directly impacted investigations. The provision, which
went into
effect in December, strengthened the ban on synthetic drugs.
Additional
synthetic drug
investigations are currently ongoing throughout the state.
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