Judiciary Leverett Subcommittee Meeting
Video Transcript
Duration: 84 minutes
Speakers: 18
Any other questions?
I don't see any questions, sir. Thank you so much for your testimony. Appreciate it.
Hitter, is it Goffner?
Just have a seat, tell us your name, and give us your testimony.
Hey. Oh, uh-oh.
Hey. I'm Peter Goughner. How are you doing today? Thank you so much for being here today on this cold day, and, I appreciate you hearing,
my testimony.
I'm gonna be brief.
Again, you've heard from so many people that talk about kratom. I don't wanna piggyback off of anyone and waste your time.
I wanted to share about my
former husband that passed away from kratom on October
22,
2020.
And they talked about seizure seizure, stroke,
and, cardiac arrest. That seems to be the pattern that goes on with the kratom,
when you're
when they're
it's obviously having the act the
reaction to the kratom.
So if you hear them talk about seizure stroke, that's basically what happened to my husband,
at the time. So, anyway, today, I'm I'm here speaking on behalf of the families,
that have lost loved ones, and I'm so sorry,
for that.
Five years ago,
I knew when I was called.
And, again, I'll be playing probably the video,
someday that I was called on FaceTime when the paramedics were working on him. And I was actually begging for his life, and I didn't know at the time that he had taken kratom. I knew he was taking a natural
substance natural product that was sold to him under the false pretense of natural.
So,
and that's when I start hearing all these testimonies of natural
this that, you know, it's it's just sold under a a false pretense of being natural, and that's not accurate.
Kratom,
took his life
very quickly.
My daughter,
who is now 22, she testified last year.
It's very hard for her to testify and relive every moment of that time. So it's very,
hard. And so I'm here to testify on behalf of my family, and, Dana Pope could actually not be here today,
and,
her apologies.
But,
Kratom is known for the gas station heroin.
I've been I usually try to stop in every gas station,
along the way from Georgia to Saint Simons to wherever I'm traveling doing photography.
And when I walk in there,
there is,
kratom,
and it's right next to the monster drink.
My late husband passed away from mixing a monster drink and kratom.
And so he had no clue
to the people, the folks who sold that to him. And,
when there was a deposition,
they were asked, how did you hear about kratom? How did you know to sell kratom? How did you get that into your store?
And his answer was,
oh, I saw a sign at a at a stoplight that says sell Kratom, make money. I said, wow. That's interesting.
That's all you know. That's all you know. You don't have a degree or anything like that. So the people that are selling this product have no idea really what they're selling at all. And so I'm asking everyone to if you have ChatGPT, if you have Google, please Google it. If you haven't if you haven't
even done the research on it, and I'm not saying you have or haven't, but if you haven't, please do the research on what is happening with kratom. How and I don't know if you heard, but in Florida, 92,000
pounds
pounds
of kratom were confiscated down in Florida to make the seven o h product
that is now being
distributed. But, again, he was not able to do that because it was confiscated by law enforcement.
And these are things that are that are moving into Georgia, that are moving into I mean, it's gonna surpass fentanyl. It's right at it. And so if we think fentanyl is bad, this is gonna just only get worse. And so on behalf of my late husband and his mom that passed away last week, she said, put Peter, please try to just fight for this. And please ask that they please consider passing this passing this law because it's killing people.
I mean, and it's almost like a stoplight. People keep going through the stoplight. They keep getting killed. How many more people have to get killed
in order for we us to stop what's going on and do some more research on what's going on and just ban this bill? I mean, ban this ban this kratom and pass this bill.
So thank you for your time. Thank you so much. And, again, we offer condolences on your loss, and thank you for your testimony. Thank you, sir. Is there any, questions for miss Goff?
I don't see that you have any questions. Thank you so much. Thank you for your time. Ryan, is it Scaife? Scaife. Yes, sir. Scaife. Okay.
Good afternoon.
My name is Ryan Scaife. I come to you as a Georgian,
member of the faith community,
and a a member of the recovery community. I live in Walker County, Georgia,
with my wife and our five children.
I work as director of community relations at Renew Ministries in Chattanooga, Tennessee. We are a twelve month faith faith based residential discipleship and recovery ministry.
I went through this ministry six and a half years ago after struggling with opioid addiction for ten years that included pharmaceuticals,
heroin, fentanyl.
And by the grace of God, I stand here today before you,
free of that addiction.
At Renew thank you. At Renew, we work with over a 100 men a year,
many men who come to us from North Georgia,
and I'm here to just simply share what I'm seeing.
Kratom use is rampant. Kratom addiction is skyrocketing.
I see opioid addicts who are trading that addiction for a kratom addiction. I see alcoholics
who are using kratom,
you know, to try as to therapeutically who become kratom addicts, and I see just regular stressed and depressed people who become kratomatics.
Kratom dependency and withdrawals
is,
becoming equal to that of heroin and fentanyl because of the ever evolving kratom industry and the growing potency and availability of the product.
I spoke with a gentleman two days ago when I got invited to come here, who I know has struggled with kratom addiction, and I asked Mark. I said, Mark, when were you hooked on kratom?
He said, about two weeks in, I couldn't get through the day without using it. And four to five weeks in, I couldn't get out of the bed without using it.
Those were the same symptoms I had when I used heroin and fentanyl.
Another individual,
told me a story when he came in to renew about his local gas station who was behaving more like a drug dealer. In addition to the testimonies that you've heard from several here today,
gas station owners,
I'm not gonna stereotype which ones, but you can probably guess, are finding product to users. So they have regular customers who come in.
They know they have to have this product. They know they're addicted. They know they're gonna come back. They take their IDs as collateral. They put it behind the register, and they keep a registry of who owes them money, and they lock that in a safe. How do I know that? I I had to go to one of these gas stations to retrieve,
an ID for a gentleman who came into our ministry,
had to pay off his tab. And when the guy pulled out the list of people that he had licenses and and and, you know, an IOU for, it looked like my notebook here.
I believe that stats on kratom use are unreliable and underestimated.
I work with countless other recovery organizations and ministries in North Georgia and the Chattanooga area, and most of them are unable to test for kratom
because they don't have the funding to afford the drug test, the 18 panel test that come with us. We do test for kratom at my ministry, and I'm seeing, you know, twenty to thirty percent of people who come in with an addiction problem are testing positive for kratom as well when they come in.
Our neighbors in Tennessee are working on a bill to ban kratom,
and I urge you in Georgia to do the same. They're you're gonna hear opponents of the kratom ban bill, who disagree with this, but I believe the widespread effects of kratom are dark and evil. The widespread availability, the lack of regulation, and the lack of medical studies and professional medical oversight and care is leading to devastating and unexpected
impacts on individuals, their families, and the addiction and recovery community.
And in regards to there being more evils out there and allowing people to use this as therapy, I'll just share with you what's on my heart. Romans twelve seventeen. Repay no one evil for evil, but give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all. So I encourage you to consider this bill.
Thank you for your testimony. Any questions for,
reverend Scaife?
I don't think you have any questions. Thank you so much for your testimony.
Thank you guys for the opportunity.
And I'm impressed that you have found the time to come down here with five children and a ministry. That's you got a lot going on.
Thank you for your for what you do. Sydney Easam.
Good afternoon.
Alright.
Alright. Can you hear me alright?
I'm really just gonna tell you a story about the addiction of kratom and what it does. So my name is Sydney.
I'm a wife and a mother.
My 11 old is right there in the corner of sleep. So,
I'm here to tell you about my experience with kratom and what it's done to my family.
We were in the halls all the whole time before this. So,
when I was seven months pregnant
with our child, my husband, Landon,
came to me sobbing, saying he is
addicted to an opioid called kratom
and that he feels like he might die from it.
I can tell you it is only by the grace of God that he's still alive today.
I have watched him go from
a driven, ambitious,
thoughtful, and hardworking person to someone whose primary concern
is staying high on kratom no matter the cost.
I'll tell you, it's a soul crushing pain to watch your spouse slowly being taken away from you and morph into a person that you don't recognize.
He became very angry on kratom, had psychotic episodes,
suicidal episodes,
accrued significant debt while on kratom.
And during the last year, he attended an outpatient rehab,
an inpatient rehab,
a residential reintegrative program
and a detox facility
in efforts to overcome his kratom addiction.
Sorry.
He currently in a long term residential facility where he will be gone for a minimum of one year.
He's missed our son's first Christmas,
first steps. He'll miss his first birthday soon, and he's missed so many of the wonderful moments that come with having your first child.
I've learned how to be a mother of my own as I watch my husband struggle
with an addiction to a substance that should have never been readily accessible at a gas station for him.
I'm now raising our son and managing our house by myself
while trying to pick up the pieces of the destruction that kratom has caused in our life.
Kratom also caused my husband
I'm trying hard not to cry. Sorry.
Kratom also caused my husband to become severely physically ill
resulting in countless doctors visits, ER visit.
The damage that this drug has done to my family is far too extensive to be captured in just a few minutes.
It's robbed me of some of the most precious moments of my married life,
moments I'll never get back.
And at times,
I don't know if I'll ever truly even get my husband back to the person I married.
But still, I'm proud of him for getting the treatment he needs and continuing to fight every day to remove kratom from his life.
But, you know, if you are here today and you believe that kratom
is harmless or that it doesn't require regulation,
I ask you to consider whether you would feel the same if your family was wrecked because of something you can pick up at a gas station
everywhere you go.
But
that's all.
Thank you so much for your testimony. I know that was a challenging,
testimony to give. Do we have any questions,
for miss Eason?
I don't see any questions. Thank you so much for,
talking to us today.
Jonathan McMillan.
Good afternoon. How you doing?
Thank you for having me today. I'm here,
to speak to you about
the,
the effects that Kratom
had on my son, 29 year old, healthy,
load working out.
Mary got three beautiful children,
and,
me and his mom drove all the way from South Georgia up here to
share a story with you. So,
and,
so that happened about three years ago. Again, he had hurt his back at work,
and a guy had,
he says, here. Take this. This will help you. I don't know what it is. My son has struggled with alcohol.
So mixing that with the kratom, what I've
learned
is even worse than it being by itself. So,
you know, us living four hours away from him, he lives in Gay, Georgia. You know?
The first call we get is he's having a seizure.
So
his mom and I, we,
you know, we don't know what's going on, and the doctors can't they don't know. So
as time progressed,
I'd say within three years, he's had over 20 seizures.
That's just the ones we know about.
And one day, I encounter or I've encountered him two times having one. One day, we was having a family outing,
and his twin sisters come to me and said, daddy, Hunter's not breathing.
So I go over there,
try to help him.
I've I've been in law enforcement for
fourteen years and, you know, I've seen a few things and learned a few things about reenter an aid. So you know? And but when it's your own child, it's, it's a lot different.
You know? Not saying that you wouldn't do it for somebody else's, but
it it hits home.
And,
I'm thankful that,
representative Townes has
contact we've
stayed in contact about this because, it's new to me. I I didn't really know nothing about Kratom.
And what I found about it is nothing good.
I've tried to look and say, what is, what is good about kratom? You know? What can it be good for? Or, you know, nothing good.
And, I'm just here today to just,
I'm not sure to coat nothing, but
and my heart goes out to these ones that's lost loved ones. I still have our son,
and if and I'm fighting for him and the other ones
that don't think that they have a problem.
So
I appreciate y'all's time today,
and,
I urge you to, pass this bill.
Thank you so much for your testimony. Any questions for mister McMillan?
Yep. You don't have any questions. Thank you so much for making the trip. Where'd you come from? Where'd you come from today, mister McMillan? Brant McKillan. Brant McKillan? Yes, sir. Well, thank you for making the trip. Appreciate that.
Matt Wetherington.
Hello, everyone. My name is Matt Weathering.
I'm attorney at the Weatherington law firm. I'm also involved in wrongful death litigation involving kratom. I have five very quick points, and I'm gonna jump around so I don't waste your time. So number one is that Georgia has put the cart before the horse. So in the general process is that a drug manufacturer has to prove that a drug is safe and,
can be used by people before you're allowed to sell it.
Georgia
did the opposite. We
legalized kratom and then said, okay. Now prove it's not safe. That's the wrong way to think about things. That's not how you normally do it. So that's part of the reason why we don't have 50 different states doing ban bills for kratom because not every state in the country explicitly passed legislation
making kratom legal. It's just not legal to be sold there. It's operating illegal gray zone and is sold in those states sometimes, but they're subject to action in those states. So you we are now seeing many of those states who passed explicit authorizations for kratom like Georgia did. Now reversing those bills. So that's number one, carp for the horse. Number two is that we've already had a study committee. We did one in 2018 with Vernon Jones who then subsequently became a paid lobbyist for the kratom manufacturers
and advocated for the passage of legalizing kratom in Georgia. This is part of how we got here.
Number three is think about the greater harm. Now what's worse here? Having another group, another room filled with parents of addicted or lost children
or someone not getting their preferred drug for a moment in time until the drug manufacturers can prove that it's safe and provide guidelines for how to use it. Like, that's what we're really talking about here when we're talking about this ban. We're saying, wait a minute. I've got constituents that want to be able to use these products, or I got all these people saying, hey, I think we can use this to help people get off of other drugs. You get all these potentially good use cases.
Think about then the other side. Someone dies.
Someone has a lot loses their child, their their spouse.
That's the greater harm here. And there's no one saying you can't come back to this committee and say, guess what? We got the science now. We've gone through the FDA testing. We've done the things we're supposed to do. Now it's safe. Let's go ahead and unban it. There's nothing wrong with doing it that way. That's the normal process when we talk about doing good, answering your call of service. That's how you do it.
Lastly, there's been some legal questions. I'm happy to answer answer questions about this specifically
as to whether we can Georgia can put things on its scheduled list.
So answer to that is unequivocally yes. You're not required to, you know, have a federal schedule before Georgia does it. Georgia explicitly authorizes and maintains its own schedule list. You may hear some explicitly
authorizes
and maintains its own schedule list. You may hear some commentary or questions about can you enforce it or can we prosecute it? My answer to that is it doesn't really matter. And the reason why is because once you put something on Georgia's schedule list, a whole bunch of other good things happen.
It authorizes the board of pharmacy to enact handling requirements. It puts in place reporting requirements and reporting tools. It makes money available for treatment,
for our rehab centers. It does all kinds of good things
aside from necessarily the prosecution aspect. And I acknowledge that's an open question.
I couldn't find any law one way or the other as to whether you can prosecute something that doesn't appear on both lists. But we do have very capable qualified
judicial
advisers here at the capital who can give us some additional language if that became a priority, which I proposed to you it is not. The most important thing here is reducing harm and putting this on the schedule list lets all the people and all the resources that Georgia has to help people come into play. So pass this bill, and I'm happy to answer any questions.
Thank you, Sherry. I think you have a question, representative Kendrick. Yes.
Thank you for that. Thank you, mister chairman. Thank you for answering the with the the answer to your first question because that's what I was asking about the process.
And I'm still trying to get clarity
about
if the general consensus
from everybody that we heard, and maybe there's a mix of it, is it your stance that kratom,
the pure product itself is harmful
or that is too
assessable and people are abusing it? Because I think those are two different questions, and I'm trying to get what
everybody is is trying to say. Let me start by restating your question back to you because I feel like you've asked it a couple of times and haven't gotten a good answer. So I wanna make sure that I'm answering what you want. So it sounds like you're asking about the distinction between is kratom, like, a leaf of kratom put out here. Is that leaf of kratom dangerous, or are we only talking about what people do with that leaf of kratom? Is that the question? Not only would they do with it, but are they
using it in in a piece of way? Because if I went out and, you know,
took title now that's over the counter, if I've used that, then, obviously, I'm still gonna have bad effects, but the product itself is safe. So I'm trying to get an understanding of, are we saying that the pure leaf itself is unsafe or that it is too accessible and therefore people are abusing the
the use of a purely
a safe product in its pure form?
So the answer you're gonna get back, and I think this is something that everyone can agree with on both sides, is that the poison is in the dose is the argument that you'll hear and determine, like, at what point does that leaf become dangerous? Is it one leaf? Is it two leaves? Is it one glass of water or 500 glasses of water that will kill you? Because you'll hear people say that even water can be poisonous. Mhmm. So the short answer to your question, and I hate to defer it this way, is that everyone says everything. Everyone's got an opinion and a take and a take on kratom right now that goes both ways. Some people will say that just the kratom leaf itself is dangerous. Other people will say, no. It's the way that the kratom leaf is being used. Other people will say, no. It's the processing of the leaf to turn it into an extract that's dangerous. Other people say, no. It's the pulling out of certain,
you know, particles of the kratom leaf that make it dangerous. Everyone says all kinds of things. And my answer to you at the end of the day is those other things may not really matter
because we still haven't answered the threshold question of, can the drug manufacturers, the kratom manufacturers, can they prove that the products that they're putting in the market are safe?
And the answer to that question is no. They have not met that burden yet. Therefore, until they can, the smart answer when you've got all of this evidence around you that says that
it it either it is dangerous or it probably is dangerous. And and I'll defer. The science is kinda I'll I'll agree. The science is kind of
developing.
But when you've got all this smoke around you, I mean, you don't have to jump jump into a volcano to know that it's hot. We've got a whole lot of heat here. We got parents just saying, my kid died from kratom. I my child is addicted to kratom. You got you got poison control saying, like, we're seeing a lot of kratom problems. We don't have to wait
until we've conclusively and definitively proved, oh, yeah. This is something that's killing a bunch of people. We've got enough evidence here to say, let's wait and see. Let's not let kratom just run wild in Georgia until we've got certainty.
Let's be proactive. Let's do the right thing. Let's save lives
and then wait until the science develops and let them come back and and tell you otherwise.
Does that help? Yes. So so the book ended, you're
you're saying that regardless of if it's the the leaf or if people are abusing it, the burden is on the kratom industry
to prove that it should not be on a schedule one drug. And and until they do, it should be on a schedule one drug. Perfectly stated. Okay.
Any other questions to this witness?
Excellent. See a question. Thank you very much.
Drew Ashby.
Don.
Don's
oh, sorry.
I guess he's not here. Oh, he's not here? Yeah. Okay.
Is it, district attorney Smith? You still here?
Morning, ladies and gents.
I'm Jason Smith, the DA out in the Tallapoosa Circuit.
I have Harrelson and Polk County, so I'm right on the the Alabama line.
First, I wanna thank,
my guys from from our drug task force for coming out.
I'll I'll go ahead and tell you the
these guys
and our GBI task force out there
are,
probably doing more to fight
gas station poison than than any other law enforcement group,
in the state.
So all my z z top guys there,
they're out there. I mean, they they are hitting it, and they've been hitting it hard for years.
Yeah.
They they got a cool car they ride around into.
But
I I've I was over here today for other reasons, and I I just kinda came in
to to kind of
back up what they're what they testified to.
But I I've been surprised over the past,
two or three weeks,
to determine to see how many people under
the Gold Dome
have no idea what what Kratom is. Never heard of Kratom.
And it's something we've been battling out on I 20,
for better part of a decade.
I have the first two exits once you come into to Georgia from Alabama.
And when you get off Exit 5, which is the first exit,
you're not greeted by
signs
or, you know, welcome to hear that. You're you're greeted by about twenty
twenty foot flags that say, kratom.
And they're at gas stations, and they just line each side.
And
gas stations, they have a gas pump. They're not selling any gas. They're simply selling kratom to folks from Alabama because they beat us to the you know, banning it.
And
I'd I'd like to sit here and and tell you about all the crime that comes from those gas stations and everything else, those gas station sales, and what the sidewalks look like on those gas stations at, you know, 10:11 o'clock at night.
But I know my my time is short. And just by complete happenstance,
today
was recovery day at the Capitol. I didn't
realize that was today.
And, as I was about to go into a meeting about an hour and a half ago, I ran into
20
of,
my local
drug court and mental health court graduates that were here coming through.
Also, I I will toot my own horn a little bit in that
you will not find a bigger advocate and a bigger elected DA advocate
for accountability
courts than myself.
I'm a huge advocate for our mental health courts across the state and our drug courts.
I I've been our mental health court prosecutor for about six years. When I was elected DA last year or a year before last, I made a promise that I was going to stay in that court. So
twice a month, I am with our mental health court,
staffing those meetings.
I ran into them. They had no idea this bill was
even up.
I made and and they simply said, what's it about? I said, they're looking to ban Kratom.
All of them in almost unison,
they had to go catch a bus
to go go back to Cedartown, Georgia.
But they said,
tell
the what they they they called you congressman.
They said, tell those congressmen Tell everybody know.
Tell those congressmen
this will be absolutely
massive
in Georgia's recovery
effort.
That just happened
a 100 yards from where we're sitting with 20
recovering
opioid addicts.
So like I say, that that was pure
God intervention as I was walking into a room, and they just happened to see them walking by. And they started yelling, there's there's mister Smith.
So with with that said,
I I would sit here and and and love to go into the the crime
that we're seeing that derives from all this, the overdoses
we are seeing day in and day out from all of this.
But
as someone who represents
a a circuit right on the Alabama line, I mean, it it it doesn't take a rocket scientist to, you know when you drive on I 20 or I 85 into Alabama,
you start seeing firework city, big firework, you know, stands.
When you cross into Georgia,
you're seeing the kratom stand, you're seeing the kratom convenience stores.
Do the math.
But with that said, I I I held up on my end of the promise to tell my drug court and mental health court graduates,
to let you guys know that this would be absolutely massive in the opioid opioid,
recovery,
of the state.
Well, thank you for your, testimony. Do we have any questions of this witness?
I don't see any questions. Thank you so much. Appreciate what you do.
The chairman always comments how y'all are out there on the front line between us and Alabama, so we appreciate you acting as that buffer for it.
Okay.
Alright. Let's
see.
I think that's all before. Alright. And that that that, I think, concludes the testimony of those in favor of.
We've got a few to testify against. So, mister Highsmith.
Thank you, mister chairman. Robert Highsmith. Hello, madam chairman. Robert Highsmith,
with the law firm of Holland and Knight.
And we we are against the
version of house bill nine sixty eight as drafted,
which is why we checked that box on your form, mister chairman. But, I wanna
just
we represent a company, called, Botanicals for Better Health and Wellness, and they make a a, some some products, including the beverage products
that are made from the natural leaf of Kratom.
And I wanna say that our company agrees
wholeheartedly
and supports about 99 and a half percent of what you just heard. So even though we are against the bill as drafted, and I'll tell you why,
everything they're describing is happening, everything they're everything they're describing is bad, and everybody that is manufacturing products that is causing it, needs to suffer very serious consequences.
The the issue and representative Townsend and I, we've spent a great deal of time talking about all of this, and he understands exactly where I'm coming from. The issue is,
you know, we would support scheduling these synthetic
products like,
seven hydroxymitragynine,
that that
that mimic
extremely
high doses
of some of the natural components of creme, and I'll explain what I mean by that.
We would support scheduling,
seven o h with appropriate language. We can talk about exactly how to do it.
But
but miss, representative Townsend's bill just paint just paints
slightly too broad of a brush because it actually covers just the plant. And although the witness before that said, you know, well, what does just the leaf what does just the leaf do? Well, I tell you.
To to get the amount of seven o h, which is the abbreviation and much easier to say than seven hydroxymitragynine,
to get that amount of that metabolite into your body, you'd have to eat a 100 pounds of this stuff. A 100 pounds. Yeah. You eat a 100 pounds of just about anything, representative, as you alluded earlier. You know you you know, a number of bad things can happen. And more importantly, it's it would be impossible to do.
When when a human being ingests the kratom leaf,
which has lots of benefits that we can talk about in in in future proceedings, mister chairman. I don't wanna
I know the hour's long.
The the body,
creates a metabolite.
As it metabolizes,
it, that creates a tiny, tiny amount,
tiny amount
of of seven
hydroxymitrogyny.
What these bad actors are doing and what I suspect now look, every bad experience that you heard about, mister chairman, is terrible, and I don't know the specifics of those ex and so I don't wanna presume anything.
But, mister chairman,
I'm I suspect strongly that
nearly all, if not all, of the awful, awful things that you heard about that are absolutely happening and need to stop
came from
synthesized
highly, highly concentrated,
chemical products,
highly concentrated chemical products like seven o h, that are in these tablet forms that are that that represented Townsend's bill from a couple years ago already banned. Now do we lack enforcement?
Do we lack resources
Absolutely. And we've worked with representative Townsend and the state law department,
and the FDA for that matter to put out a consumer,
bulletin that says, stay away from seven o h. We we assisted. Our company assisted in preparing that because they're absolutely right. That stuff is bad news. And the mister Scafe who said, look. The way they're describing what this chemical does to people is how I felt when I was addicted to fentanyl. He's right. It it does hit the same receptors
in those quantities and in those concentrations.
So I I'm not gonna belabor the point we're gonna continue to talk about this bill, mister chairman.
We would support
the appropriate scheduling of seven zero h and other synthetic,
manufactured manufactured
substances, what we would ask is let's not schedule a leaf, a natural product that might be made into a tea or or or a beverage
that there's no way with that again, without something silly like ingesting a 100 pounds of it, there's no way you can get to the levels that are creating these, these bad outcomes. And so we look forward to continuing to work with representative towns and continuing to work with this subcommittee and full committee,
to, potentially amend the bill to absolutely cover what's happening to these folks that have testified,
but not ban a product that many people and you'll hear more about this, mister chairman, as we continue the process,
but not ban a natural product that many people are benefiting from and that isn't causing all these awful,
outcomes.
Is there a specific
amendment you're requesting to the bill? We we would again, we wanna be careful about the language because as as you note, mister chairman, we're talking about the schedule that includes LSD, heroin,
more you know, schedule ones that that's the serious stuff that that other than research, nobody ought to have anything to do with as madam as madam chairman well knows.
So we wanna be careful about the language, but we would generally support
scheduling of
seven o h and other synthetic
manufactured
compounds
that are creating all these, harms, because and and our interested, mister chairman, if I may, you know, everybody came up here and said,
That's very frustrating to a manufacturer of a of a of a product that only uses a natural leaf and doesn't do any of these bad things. Seven o h is not kratom.
Kratom is a natural leaf product that many people, have used to their benefit. Seven o h is a metabolite of that that the body produces in tiny, tiny amounts.
And and, and next time, mister chairman, we're gonna bring a medical doctor who works for our company to to give some nobody wants to hear a lawyer try to play doctor.
But we'll we'll give you we'll give some more detail on that, but would would we would we support scheduling the the synthesis and the high concentration
a 100 or more times
of of substance unnatural substances like seven hydroxymitragynine
that that do target the same receptors that morphine and other opiates, target. It absolutely,
need to. And that representative Townsend's bill, the Crime Control Protection Act from a couple of years ago already bans
the problem that you we have an enforcement problem. We have a compliance problem,
and and it hurts our market for our natural product
for somebody to say, oh, crap. I'm crap. I'm crap. I'm crap. I'm crap. Well, hold on a second. We're like, wait. We have a product that's helping people that's a good product,
an unnatural
chemical that is banned and against which there needs to be more enforcement. You're calling that kratom. That hurts our market, and that's why we're here, mister chairman.
Any questions?
Madam Chairley? Thank you.
Robert,
is this the only product that your comp that company makes?
They have the other products, but the the the but I'd I would wanna get you a list. I wouldn't wanna try to do that from memory. But Okay. So that's not the main one that they're pushing? No. No. Well, the the product that we're concerned about with this bill is a
is a is primarily beverage based products
that are made from the kratom leaf without synthesis, without concentration,
without,
the the type of adulteration
that that is leading to these outcomes that you heard about.
Then explain to me because I haven't heard the previous,
testimony.
What does that drink do?
Why do people buy it?
Oh, there and we'll have doctor we'll have, our our medical director come and and testify as to the specific, you know, it has calming effects. It has it has,
it has,
you know, lots of of natural benefits, like lots of, you know, natural products and teas and and various things do. And it has a, but it it does not have,
importantly, this the addictive pro properties that this that the synthesized products do that are that that that are banned and need to stay banned. But it okay. May I have another question, mister chairman? Yes, ma'am. I'm sorry.
But does it affect and
and they have they're they can get a high from it?
No. No. No, ma'am. I would not describe it as a high by any by any means. But because because, again,
the high that people that mister Scaife accurately described what happens when you take,
concentrated
synthesized seven o h. It targets the same,
receptors that morphine targets. And in and and by some measures, more effectively.
And the and but the natural kratom leaf does not do that unless you eat a 100 pounds of it, which
is is only a theoretical,
problem. Up
one of the things they've already said. So often,
you really don't know
which combination if they're taking other things.
But it seems to me if they're selling it in these kind of stops,
which are pretty skate skanky, many of them. Just have to be truthful.
You know, most people are looking for something, and it wouldn't be popular if they were not getting some
effect
to it, whether it be by itself or combined with something else.
I'm sorry. You we have a long time friendship, and I don't mean to put you on the spot, but
I just have to believe it's causing some kind of
that kind of a high or
they feel loose and easy or something.
Well I you have you're gonna you're gonna have to show me. The doctor's gonna have to show me that it doesn't do that. Sure. Sure. Rep madam chairman. And and and you're right about that. But, again,
a and, and,
so many of these products that are being marketed as kratom are not the natural leaf, but rather these synthetic synthesized metabolites. And you're absolutely
right that a lot of what is currently available,
in gas stations,
and and in other other retailers
is not our company's product that doesn't do that, but rather these synthesized,
metabolites
like seven o h, that that's the big one,
that that absolutely had these negative effects. And you're absolutely right, madam chairman. That's why people are buying it. That's why representative Townsend Townsend's bill already rendered it illegal, and that's why we would support,
an appropriate,
change in language to schedule it
while not,
while not, you know, putting on schedule one a a natural, a natural leaf product that, you know, for decades has has been in use around the world without you know, it was only when people started to be able to figure out how to synthesize
these metabolites that you started to see these these horrible outcomes that we we're every bit as opposed to as anybody else that testified. Thank you.
Thank you, madam chairman. So I I gather,
miss Donna Smith, what
the the point, I guess, you're you're making is that some of these products labeled as kratom are actually highly concentrated
metabolites
of kratom,
extremely concentrated metabolites of kratom and should not be marketed by that name.
And you feel that the law currently, which was passed by representative Townsend a few years
ago, would would prohibit their sale as kratom, but it's just not
being enforced?
Everything 100%,
mister chairman. That's you you got that could could not say it better. I I the only thing I would say is that it's not that it's necessarily not being enforced. It's just a matter of resources like anything else. Right? I mean, you know, but but seven o h is representative Townsend's bill from earlier already made it illegal. If representative Townsend says, look, that's not enough. We need to schedule this stuff, put it in the same legal category as heroin and morphine LSD.
Again,
language
we we we wanna say the language, of course, but but we we would we would absolutely support that because we agree with representative towns and that those products
should not be marketed at all, and we especially don't wanna market it in a way that that that confuses them with our product, which is legal and safe. But but do I gather you're saying that striking the word, and I hope I'm pronouncing this correctly, metrogenine
from his proposed bill would not necessarily
address your concerns, or that's something you just need to study. Oh, we seven hydroxy
mitrogenine
is the is the substance that absolutely needs to be scheduled. It's the it's the it's the kratom leaf itself that we'd wanna be that we'd wanna be careful about. And we'll we'll work with representative Townes and, and the committee to to propose So it's not just hypoxymotag
Correct.
Metrogene itself, you think, should be scheduled. Well,
I would I again, I wanna be careful about how we would and and we didn't come here with a a proposed substitute to to offer, although we will, mister chairman, when when the chair tells us it's the appropriate time.
But we we want to we wanna make sure that we get we just wanna make sure we get the chemistry right and not ban the natural leaf product, which, contains,
tiny, tiny amounts of these things. But the real problem now this is what I just cannot emphasize enough. The real problem is
the the body metabolizes this product and creates a tiny amount of, for example,
seven o h. Yeah. What the bad actors are doing is putting in a tablet form
100
times or more
the amount of seven o h that the body could ever create, and that's that's where we agree with representative Townsend's got a gun. Now and and, again, the language and the chemistry of that, I I wouldn't wanna give you a hip shot on that, mister chairman. I'd I'd wanna be thoughtful about that and give you the exact language. Charlie Cooper.
Well, I guess
so you're
so you're saying the leaf does have enough in it.
That it would be very hard for us. First, I thought you were suggesting that we might be able
to say that if it's made strictly from the leaf,
it could go and the other
could be put on a schedule one. But the fact that the leaf does have some in it would, I think, prohibit us from doing that. No, ma'am. The the we're we're not we're not worried about the amount of seven zero eight in the leaf. That that's, you know, that that chemistry is already addressed in in
in existing statute. But but the again, as I said at the very beginning, the way nine sixty eight was introduced,
it would ban the leaf itself, and that's what we wanna get it. That that's all we wanna get right now. Are you saying that and I'm sorry. I'm just are you saying then we could someway write the law where we would specifically
not ban the leaf, anything made from the leaf, but we could put as a schedule one
the other product? Absolutely.
Okay.
That that's it. Alright. Thank you, Charlie Cooper. Alright. Any other questions?
Alright. Thank you, mister Thank you, mister chairman. Your testimony.
Jerry Keane.
Thank you, mister chairman.
Can I give this to the committee? I know Sure. Members have left.
Yeah. What what's left of us? You're welcome to have.
Thank you, chairman Levitt. Chairman the chairwoman proud. Yeah.
So, it's good to see my old friend,
chairman chairwoman Cooper. I won't tell him how long we've known each other, but a long, long time. I'm here very controversial bill we worked on? Yeah. I can remember that
one too. I represent the American Freedom Association. I am pinch hitting because our representative due to the snow and storms in DC
schedule change couldn't get here, but would like to come if if the chair schedules another hearing on this. What I passed out to you was what, mister Highsmith alluded to came from a general Carr, attorney general Carr's office, where we work with him along with mister Highsmith and many others
to go after the problem that we're all addressing.
We sent in secret buyers all over the state.
And not only did we buy them, we've provided the receipts
to the attorney general's office and the location where they're being sold.
They are processing all that now. The general did put out a press release and a consumer alert notice
on synthetics. I wanna draw your attention later,
when you're reading this as I'm sure you all will,
that he does address the synthetics as opposed to the natural leaf product.
Two years ago, if you remember, I know chairman Levitt, this
this committee spent hours and hours and hours on the subject and drafted a bill. We went to the senate and worked again and again again for hours and hours and came up with a bill that went into effect basically a year ago. Yeah. I think representative Townsend still has PTSD. Yeah. He and I I still have a little bit of a tick. So,
anyway
cease up a little bit when you started talking about your little hair. So,
so we too wanna work with him in this committee
to address the problem.
Number one, it's the synthetics.
These products have kratom on it it that have no kratom in it. They were synthetically
manufactured
in a lab without using kratom or the leaf.
There there are opioids.
They're horrible. They need to go. That's why we went to the AG's office with the products, and this is what we've gotta do. The missing piece we've talked around so far today is enforcement.
Representative Trey Kelly introduced at the end of last year, house bill seven fifty seven, which is now pending
in agriculture and consumer affairs in the house.
And we spent pretty much the entire summer and fall working with the Department of Agriculture
to get them to be the enforcement mechanism
over these products
just like they do with our hemp CBD and the other products.
A lot of these products are sold in the same place, and they're in their monitoring.
One of the things and they're working on substitute language now to do that, and, hopefully, we're gonna get that out real quick. One of the things to do there,
mister chairman, is
not only labeling, but put a QR code.
We wanna require any manufacturer that sells product in Georgia to register that product with the Department of Agriculture
with a lab analysis
and a QR code on every product that'll have a current lab analysis
on file as a consumer with my phone that I could pull it up. And so we're working on that language now.
There's a lot more. I'll I'll let that bill have its own hearing and take its but we we we feel good that we're moving in the right direction there to attack the enforcement, Megan Nelson with representative Kelly.
I really wanna turn my time over to the next speaker, or he's far more qualified. I think once you hear his credentials, you will listen up. But, appreciate the committee's consideration.
And, again, we wanna work with you, representative Townsend, to address the real problem.
Thank you so much. Any questions of this witness? Do we have anybody left to ask questions? Okay.
Thank you very much.
Mister Durkin. Bob Durkin.
Good afternoon. Afternoon. Thank you for your time. I appreciate being here. My name is Bob Durkin.
My background, I'm a pharmacist with the master's in molecular biology. I was a captain in the army for six years.
Residency trained at Walter Reed in clinical nuclear pharmacy.
I'm an attorney. I practice in the food and drug space. I'm on-site counsel to the AKA,
various dietary supplement manufacturers and distributors,
including those that that manufacture and distribute kratom products.
I was also for twelve years lucky enough to work at the Food and Drug Administration.
I started off in the center for drugs where I learned how to regulate unapproved new drugs, compounded drugs,
made my way over to the food program where I spent six years as the deputy director for the office of dietary supplement programs.
So I was the number two person in charge of dietary supplement regulation for six years at the federal level.
I'm here today to offer my my advice, my opinions,
answer questions relative as a form of regulator who understands how food is regulated in The United States.
I think a lot of this is confusion about what kratom is and kratom isn't. And we've heard some things here today, and I I'm benefiting from going last. It also it's horrible to go last because you hear some really sad stories. And as a dad, you don't know how to handle that. So I think it's real important to to see what kratom is and what kratom isn't.
If kratom is marketed as a drug, it's illegal.
Bust it, get it off the streets.
If Kratom's market is a dietary supplement or food, there is a pathway for it to legally be on the market in The United States. It doesn't require clinical control, double blind studies, placebo controlled studies.
Food goes to market unapproved in The United States. Drugs require approval.
Food can go to market with animal studies, history of use,
clinical studies if they exist, but they're certainly not required because you're not selling a drug. You're selling a food.
Kratom is a botanical out of Southeast Asia. It's been used for hundreds of years as a natural wellness of pick me up.
Legend has it, it was brought back by our Vietnam vets in the sixties and seventies, became popular in The United States in the early two thousands.
One of the ways it became popular in The United States was there was an incident in Sweden in 2010
where kratom leaf killed 10 people, nine people.
The other pharmacist in the room mentioned tramadol.
An investigation in that by the Swedes discovered that that kratom was contaminated with methotramadol,
the active metabolite of the drug tramadol, and and that's what ate their livers and killed them. It wasn't the kratom leaf. But that's where the dye was cast for the FDA and its position on kratom and how they were gonna approach it. From there, you had import alerts. Myself, when I was in charge in 2015, authorized the seizure of kratom
based on the information I have.
In hindsight now, that probably wasn't the best decision because there is a good body of science out there about the safety of kratom.
Companies have satisfied the pre market responsibilities of the Food and Drug Administration by filing at least seven new dietary ingredient notifications to the Food and Drug Administration.
This This is where a manufacturer
distributor puts together information about their manufacturing to show that they can make it the right way. They put together information about the safety of the product to show that it's reasonably reasonably expected to be safe the way they manufacture it and sell it. Kratom is a botanical.
The word kratom has come to include so many things. The leaf, the ground leaf, an extract taken from that leaf.
Unfortunately, now it's also come to include things like seven hydroxymitragynine,
pseudoendoxal,
and other metabolites.
You know, we talked a lot about habit and addiction,
and I'm I'm that's that is a very complicated science. There are other experts that can counsel on that,
but
I'm pretty sure I have a habit for coffee or addicted to coffee. Today, when I went to your commissary and there was no coffee at noon, I I I I panicked a little.
And I'm not making light of anything, but it's a it's a very complicated
spectrum
of of of science.
You know, to to draw the analogy of what's happened to kratom,
you could take a coffee bean, you could grind it up. That's a gruff that's a crushed coffee bean. You can make an extract of it. We call that a pot of coffee.
That pot of coffee contains caffeine.
If somebody were to pull that caffeine out of the pot of coffee and chemically alter it, usually with pool chemicals, shock pool chemicals, and turn it into something different, that's what seven hydroxymitragynine
is. Folks are then taking that seven hydroxymitragynine
and selling it, sometimes calling it seven hydroxy, sometimes calling it something else, sometimes calling it kratom.
Seven hydroxymitragynine
is not found naturally in the leaf. It only develops in the leaf after the leaf is plucked from the tree and mitragynine
oxidizes in the seven hydroxy.
A very very small amount of seven hydroxy is in the leaf because of that oxidation process.
When you eat kratom, when you eat a kratom leaf or when you ingest metragynine, the primary alkaloid from kratom, your liver metabolizes
it into a lot of things. One of which is seven hydroxymitragynine.
That's the way your body works. You ingest things that metabolizes them and the things that knows how to excrete or get out.
Seven hydroxymitragynine
is 15 times more potent than opium. 15 times more potent than morphine.
It attaches to the mu opioid receptor and does not let go like other other drugs do. In addition to that, the the ER surgeon,
he might be gone. Now, mention how complicated the pharmacology is. He was talking about seven hydroxymitragynate.
It attaches to so many different receptors in the brain. It's it's you can't even keep track of it. So I think right now what you have is a problem where
you're regulating and you have a choice to ban.
My experience is that when you ban something, you drive it into the shadows. You drive it to the lowest common denominator.
It's not gonna go away. It's gonna be in your it's gonna be in in your in your cities, in your state. It's gonna come in from out of state. People are gonna find a way to sell it because they make money on it. What's gonna happen is quality is gonna drop. It's not gonna be made the right way. It's not gonna be labeled the right way. You're gonna go back to the days when kratom was sold in baggies
with Sharpie marker on it about what it was. People are gonna get sick. People are gonna die. There are no conditions for use. You're better off regulating it and controlling it. I don't think you have a regulation problem. I think you have an enforcement problem. You've already made it illegal to sell seven hydroxymitragidine.
You've already made it illegal to sell kratom that has more than a hundred and fifty milligrams of mitragidine in a serving. It seems like you just need to enforce it. As far as the proposed ban or or scheduling,
DEA looked at scheduling kratom, not actually kratom, metragidine and seven hydroxymitragidine
twice. It failed twice.
Right now on July 29, the Food and Drug Administration secretary Kennedy and commissioner McKay stood on a podium with the DEA administrator and announced they were going to schedule seven hydroxy.
It was profound. Nothing like has ever happened in American health history. It it's remarkable.
They pointed to a chart with waves of the heroin epidemic and how it's transitioned from different drugs. And they pointed to a cross line on this on the chart where we we were coming down from fentanyl and we're going up for seven hydroxy.
And they said, this is where we're at in time and we're gonna stop it. Right now, you have a seven hydroxy problem. You have a pseudo and docile problem. You have the next it problem.
If you're gonna ban something, you could probably do what's called an eight factor or seven factor analysis. You found it in your your code of regulations there, and it looks at different factors.
And those factors are what decides when something gets put into a schedule. They're very complicated factors. If you want a seven factor, eight factor analysis, seven hydroxy, I'll get it to you. If you want a seven factor, eight factor,
analysis on metrogynine,
I'll get it to you. If you want one on kratom leaf, I'll get it to you. I strongly encourage you to schedule seven hydroxyl and the other metabolites,
but I strongly encourage you to regulate Kratom and enforce against the bad players while giving consumers an opportunity to choose and buy good products.
So when you say
regular kratom, are you talking about metrogena or is that another,
what's the word? It's an alkaloid. It's a it's an alkaloid.
So the other pharmacist mentioned that there's 42 alkaloids. Might even be more than that now. Which means what?
An alkaloid is a is a molecule with a nitrogenous base and then a structure from there, and they're all kind of similar. Something your body creates as a result of something else? No. It's something well, yes. But it's also something that your body pulls out a kratom. There are about 42 of them in the kratom leaf. Sort of like caffeine is not the only thing in coffee, but it's it's what we all want. The alkaloids are the things in in kratom that give the effect that you were asking about. The general wellness, the anti anxiety, the pick me up. A lot of people use kratom to replace coffee. A lot of people use kratom for mild pain. A lot of peep some people reportedly use kratom as managed withdrawal from drugs.
I don't understand that. That science is beyond me. Addiction science is very, very complicated.
So to answer your question, metragynine is the primary alkaloid in kratom. Makes up about sixty five percent of the alkaloid profile.
What folks have learned to do over time is to take the kratom leaf and do an extraction of the kratom leaf to isolate those alkaloids because that's what gives you the the the sensations, the benefits that you asked about. And they sell those as a kratom extract.
Both of those qualify as dietary ingredients under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, section two zero one f f one.
A botanical other herb or a constituent metabolite of a botanical other herb. So kratom is a dietary ingredient, and an extract of kratom is a dietary ingredient that
that based on other parts of the regulation can legally be sold
without FDA approval. Okay. Alright. Thank you. Any questions? I I went really quick there. I'm sorry. I'm nervous, and I wasn't sure my No. We we appreciate quick.
Representative Neal.
Thank you, sir. The chair. And so, yeah, just to make some general comments. Like, I
know we've debated it this ad nauseam
prior to today.
He's smiling over there.
And literally almost rewrote this bill,
in the prior version that has already passed. And I thought, to your point, we'd already addressed
a lot of the issues, and we just need to
enforce those issues because we wanna be careful, especially in this committee and a few others where
we,
you know, because we had a lot of testimony of how this helps so many people. Yeah. But then on one side, those that abuse
it, I was trying to schedule a certain way
for people that, you know, have some type of addiction
and ignore the people that, have demonstrated how this has helped them in a way when they are responsible
with using it.
So I just wanted to make that statement, but thank you for coming today. No, ma'am. It's it's a it's a good point. And your bill right now,
it's pretty good. I mean, you limit the amount of mitragidine.
You're you're not allowed to have seven zero eight or metabolites.
If you wanted to schedule or ban seven hydroxy, I would suggest you do it on a parts per million basis.
It was one of the things that was being wrestled with here with the the one of the other witness is how how would you schedule it? The state of Florida schedule it based on parts per million. They said 400 parts per million on dry weight. Anything that has over that is considered seven hydroxy and is scheduled.
That's based in pretty good science. 400 might be a little bit too low of a number. The dry weight basis is a good idea,
but you can certainly schedule seven hydroxyl in an effective way. Florida's done it.
Charlie Cooper. Okay.
I'm not a lawyer, but I do wanna say, isn't it true?
I get to play a lawyer.
In the true that when you say, oh, well, this can be just a food substance. Mhmm. Okay. And the FDA doesn't regulate it. We have had trouble over the last thirty, forty years
with
concerns about vitamins and all sorts of things that are labeled at foods
for whatever reason, but that do have harmful side effects. Yes, ma'am. Okay. So just saying that just because this one can be,
you know, labeled the food, it doesn't have harmful effects. It's getting into a real iffy It is. I can give you a good example.
If I sell an orange and I sell you that orange for its vitamin c content, buy Bob's orange, it's high in vitamin c. Now that I've sold that vitamin c like that, vitamin c is a food.
If I sell you a product and I say this has five hundred milligrams of vitamin c, it's gonna support your immune system, I just sold a dietary supplement.
If I sell you vitamin c to prevent or cure scurvy, I just sold you a drug.
So a lot of, like semantics. A lot of what the it is and a lot about how the it is regulated is based on the objective intent Semantics. Annex. Of the party putting in commerce. Yes, ma'am. Well, it's kind of I would say it's it's it's based
less on
intent
as on an objective
representation
about what it will do. Right.
I think you're right, and it's it's the objective representation of that intent on the label and labeling. What do they say about the product? You know, what what what's the deal being made?
Yeah. What my my representation
about it
determines how it's classified, and then it determines a regulatory structure, at least at the federal level. I'm assuming it's what you're talking about primarily. You know, I'm not a I'd have to look at Georgia, but Georgia is probably pretty close. A lot of states,
have incorporated the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act in part or in full. So it's likely Georgia does it pretty similar. Okay.
Any other questions to this witness?
Alright. Thank you so much for your testimony. Appreciate it. Alright. Jennifer Martin.
Are you trying to tell me something?
Okay.
Good afternoon. Good afternoon. Fellow Georgians.
Hope everyone is well.
I I wrote everything down. I hope that's okay. I'm,
nervous Nancy right now. So,
but good afternoon, and thank you for allowing me to speak. My name is Jen. I'm a mother, a person in long term recovery,
and someone whose life was saved by natural kratom leaf.
In 2006,
I was prescribed opiate pain medication by my doctor, was started as the legitimate treatment,
slowly turned into addiction, and eventually escalated into illegal
opioids including fentanyl.
I lost everything and most painfully, I lost my husband to fentanyl.
After his death, I entered recovery treatment
and that's when I found natural kratom leaf.
I have been clean for almost four years. I have my kids back. I've held the same job for four years, which that was impossible for me to do before.
And I'm in school working towards my master's in psychology to become a substance abuse counselor.
This comes from the natural kratom plant, not the extracts,
not the concentrates,
not the synthetic or high potency products like seven o h that we've heard so many, horror stories,
today,
about.
Plain kratom leaf does not intoxicate me or impair me.
It helped me stay in recovery and rebuild my
life. People deserve the right to access a natural plant based alternative that helps them stay alive and in recovery,
especially when the alternative is returning to the illicit drug market, which is very dangerous right now.
It's critical to understand that natural kratom leaf is not the same as high potency,
chemically altered, or synthetic kratom products.
Treating the same is a big mistake,
and many people in recovery, including myself, actively avoid those products because of their risk.
Kratom
Consumer Protection Act in place, which includes age limits, product testing, and labeling requirements. Those protections are working, and they should remain in place. Those protections are working, and they should remain in place.
What I do not support is
criminalizing
a natural plant that helps people like me survive while dangerous high potency products
are either lumped together or allowed to drive policy.
If there is to be a ban, it should be narrowly focused on high potency synthetic or isolated products,
not on the natural kratom leaf that has already been responsibly regulated and helped so many people like me stay alive and in recovery.
Yep. And I was gonna say, so Florida,
banned seven zero eight and they have left, you know, the natural plant alone.
Seven zero eight has ruined everything. All the all the sad stories that we heard in this room today is because of seven zero eight.
But, you know,
it's just I'm asking that you guys just leave the raw powder alone. You know?
But thank you so much for letting me talk.
Thank you. Do you have any questions
That was for miss, I'm sorry. This is Martin.
I don't think you have any questions. Okay. Thank you so much for your testimony.
Alright. Miss Gertin?
Thank
you,
sir.
I'm Maisie Lynn. Gertin, executive director at the Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Not my favorite position to be in, because I have not had a chance to talk to representative Townsend simply because
my comments have kind of bubbled up today listening to the testimony and,
also
recognizing that this is a committee that understands the difference between an and and an or.
So I apologize that I haven't because I I would have if I'd realized, but I would love to have some more conversation. But and to not belabor any of the points that have been made.
It seems to me that you would be shifting if if we were to pass this as is.
There's a criminalization
aspect to it. Right? And that's where the and and or comes in.
My colleagues across the aisle, PAC,
at this time, don't believe that we can prosecute they can prosecute
a controlled substance that's not on both Georgia's list and the feds list. And that's the way that they practice.
And it's because there's an and in the sentence in sixteen thirteen twenty one
where controlled substance is defined.
It's defined as
the l the items that are on the federal list
and the items that are on
our list.
Yes.
Well,
say that again.
Exactly.
And so,
just like happened in this room not long ago, we modified how sex offender registry is handled by changing literally
an or to an and,
and it make it much more difficult for people who have rehabilitated their lives to move on with their lives. Lives. And that's exactly what will happen here if we come back if this passes,
we put all of these things on schedule. Whatever gets put on schedule one, even if it's not prosecuted
July 2, because we have not changed that
and to an or, it could happen next year or the year after or after that. And so
given that there's an enforcement problem now with the law that you're dealing with, the idea it's a little bit of magical thinking to think that we would then have adequate enforcement for
a schedule another drug on the schedule one,
crime rubric.
But more than that, you would now be criminalizing the very people that we're concerned about saving.
And that's what we see in our jails. It's what we see in our mental health centers. It's what we see in our rehab centers. We would be just simply expanding that cohort of people rather than
dealing with what we could deal with right now with what we have in the books. You know, and and earlier this during some of the testimony today, I I thought if you walked in the room right now and you heard this person talking about
physical dependence,
heart palpitations,
seizures,
bright packaging that,
you know, draws adolescent attention.
I remember, you know, the camel, Joe Camel. Right? We've had this conversation in nicotine. We've had it in alcohol. We have it now ongoing in cannabis and hemp
and in vapes.
And all of those things we regulate.
We
don't stick them on the controlled substance list as a schedule one drug and cause all of these collateral consequences and, PS, tax revenue
also gets generated
by the things that we choose to regulate rather than criminalize.
So I I just
come to say there are some collateral consequences that I think are well worth considering. It sounds like some of the surgical
moves that could be made with respect to really focusing in on the most problematic type
of cretin
synthetic
might be part of a really thoughtful solution that would
potentially
mitigate some of my concern. But it's not gonna mitigate
the
all of the extent to which we would be potentially burdening
possessors and users with criminalization.
What they really need is addiction
help.
And I will say too, this body also, you all have looked at
in the process of looking at vapes,
some of the research that happened behind the scenes was that when New York and California,
banned vapes,
a black market develops, and that's what will happen here. And so some of the adulteration that we now, at least the gentleman who came in earlier and could say, this is adulterated. This is adulterated. You know, these are things that shouldn't be on the shelf that are.
You can see them. They're on the shelves. And so the other gentleman can go in and buy them and take them to the attorney general and say, let's do something about this. But if we
if we ban or regulate so extensively
these
materials,
it's gonna be much harder to do all of that because it's going to be a black market. It's going to be we're gonna be back in here having the conversation we had about fentanyl and felony murder. And it's just this is where we're headed if we do this this way. So I hope that, as the conversations go forward, kind of this
big picture can be kept in mind, and I
my request would be that you all never change that
and to an or
in the future in sixteen thirteen twenty one.
Do you have any questions for me? So just you so
to to clarify the committee, in sixteen thirteen twenty one, I'm It's the definition. Mhmm. There's a definition of controlled substance. It means a drug substance or immediate precursor in schedules one through five of code section sixteen thirteen twenty five through sixteen thirteen twenty nine and schedules one through five of 21 CFR part 13 o n eight, which is a federal reg, I believe. Right.
So it's saying it's a controlled substance if it's on both the federal and the state schedule. Otherwise, it's not a controlled substance. That's my understanding of the black letter, and that's also my understanding of how the prosecuting attorney's counsel interprets that in their decision making process. And then sixteen thirteen twenty five is the actual statute on schedule one substances.
Yes. That's being modified. Proposed to modify that. Exactly. But I think
the prosecutor's concern, they would have a they might not be able to make they might get dismissed,
because a court would find well, even if it's on the list in sixteen thirteen twenty five, it's not a controlled substance by definition unless it's on both the federal and the state schedule here. Right. I mean, that would certainly be our best defense to do it. Yeah.
But also,
we're
then we're in a criminal posture with a person who likely has some kind of, from what we've heard today, addiction concern
or mental health concern or medical concern that they are trying to self medicate, and we're in the wrong forum for actually helping that person.
Well, I I would push back on that a little bit because I think sometimes the criminal form is the only way we can get someone's attention, and there are alternative,
processes or venues for lack of a better word within that context
where we try to treat and and
through use of,
criminal, like, sanction,
sort of compel better behavior and compel treatment. Fair.
So And accountability courts have been very successful. The drug courts, I mean, I I don't wanna diminish that work
also. Right. You're right. We could be doing it in a in a much less, adversarial space with a lot without having to have carceral measures as the punitive,
stick, if you will.
Points we'll talk about.
Thank you.
Thank you. Any questions of this witness?
Alright. Robert, did you
I'd like to use phone voice for the
You don't need to talk to Paul.
We know who you are, but just tell us who you are
for the viewing audience at home. I'm Robert Smith. I'm the general counsel of the prosecuting attorney's counsel,
and
that's the problem.
You know, miss Gerten
attempted to explain
what my position is after asking me about it and what my concern is. I don't
you regulate kratom, don't regulate what that's a policy decision that this body is
tasked to do.
What my role has been what my role has been for ten years is to explain to you guys the consequences of a choice.
So if you
pass this bill as it's currently drafted,
when we go to allege in our indictments or accusations, we have to allege kratom,
comma, a a controlled substance.
Miss Gertin and her,
colleagues are gonna turn around and say, no. No. No. No. No. It's not a controlled substance because it has to be both scheduled by Georgia and scheduled by the Feds.
And a judge who is tasked to bound strictly construe all criminal statutes against the state
and in favor of liberty
is gonna look at us and go, you're right. Dismissed.
So pass this, but understand that then we're gonna have to tell
legislator or law enforcement partners,
you can make all the arrests you want, but we can't prosecute this.
It also then puts us in contradiction
with fifteen eighteen thirty two. That's the PAQC
statute that says that you a prosecutor
can be removed from office
if they have a policy
where they don't enforce a certain law.
So you're truly putting us in the horns of a dilemma.
Do we or advise law enforcement to arrest somebody on the law that we can't prosecute?
Or do we put ourselves in a position of possibly losing our positions as solicitors and DAs because
telling law enforcement not to enforce the law. Now something was said about Alabama and how they're doing it, and our neighbors to the West
do it a little bit differently. And if you wanna do some homework, y'all are always giving me homework. I'll give it to you.
Alabama statute 13 a dash 12 dash two one two is the beginning of their drug codes.
One of their references is to schedule is how they schedule drugs.
That's Alabama statute 20 dash two dash 23 schedule one.
There's no reference whatsoever. I'm sorry, Brock. I'll get it to you. There's no reference whatsoever
to
the federal statutes.
So as Jerwoman Cooper asked a few minutes ago, could we get rid of this? Could we make that and and or?
You can. That's a policy decision.
But as I explained to the author of the bill earlier,
you're then gonna have a problem with marijuana,
and you're gonna have both problems with other drugs. I mean, once again, remember, my obligation here is to tell you guys straight. I'm not gonna give
you one way or the other. I'm gonna tell you what the the pluses and minuses are.
Because of the way Georgia treats marijuana, which is different than the federal government,
then suddenly you put us in a position where we might have a problem with our marijuana codes.
So
that's but that's, you know, the that's the education. I'm a policy educator, and that's the education I've got for you. And I'll stand for any questions.
Any questions for this witness?
Can you go first from now on?
Alright. You have no questions other than I think we have a comment, but no question, but well taken. Thank you all so much. Thank you.
Rick, would you like to come
in and respond? Yeah. I probably need some little bit, additional information.
Couple of things.
Not quite sure about the last comment. I've heard some some
people online
signing some statutes and things like that that we need to check out to make sure. Because we wanna do everything on the up and up. So we wanna make sure if that's,
good guidance or misguided guidance. No disrespect by any means,
you know, on anyone at all.
Couple of comments. I know the case in Rick Matthews' death was from a crate and leaf itself.
And, unfortunately,
too, we talk about the pharmacist, and I I respect his, background. It's amazing background.
He made some good comments.
One of the things I was a little concerned about how it's viewed at, it can't be marketed as a drug because they're allowed to by FDA or they would. But everybody who professes to have it, take it is because of it's a drug.
It affects them medically,
and that's why it's marketed. I mean, that's why that's why people take it, and that's why manufacturers sell it. And when they tell you in the hallways or anywhere else, it's about it is that.
And so I think it's a little misguided if we say it's just it's just an herbal supplement or whatever else. They're not taking it for that.
And so,
you know, I I understand there'll be another hearing or whatever else. I think black market exists already, but
I think we can say more Georges about going this direction.
I think we just need to kinda get a legal opinion too about what the comment was just made about, whether we can or not in that direction.
So that's kinda on the short end. On the next hearing,
anyway, I I still want to commit
to consider the ban. Let's find out legally if we can or not. If we can't, that's fine. Plan b then, because we've gotta do something. If it's not a ban, we have to do something to make it,
minimally, of course, seven o h, but even even more than that to restrict
it to make sure it's safe in those dosages and everything else for Georgians. And that's what we have to do. You heard the I mean, I can bring in more I mean, Georgia poison control guide. You want his written testimony? You couldn't get more powerful than that. I mean, that's from a guy who operates out of Grady. He works at Grady. He sees a lot of different people. And George, the poison control,
that's pretty strong testimony.
So and the ones who weren't here for that, if you we need to clip it for you so you can watch it. And others who testified as well, the Davenports, the Esomes, and everything that's happened.
And our, guy from Brantley County, local judge,
affects all of us.
Alright. Thank you, sir.
Thank you. Thank you, committee.
Alright.
I think given some of the issues we mentioned at the end, I think we're gonna let this be a hearing.
The chairman can bring it up if he desires to in committee, but I think for now on the subcommittee, we'll treat this just as a hearing only.
I think we need some more discussion about the the impact of of this
and, try to work that out and see if we can get the bill moving. Yep. Understand.
Alright.
Anybody else
wish to bring anything for the committee? I think so. Mister chairman?
Just a point of personal privilege, mister chairman, if I may, we have a brand spanking new member
of the judiciary
non civil committee.
And so I I I wanna
I wanna recognize him just to introduce himself and, you know, no more than five minutes.
Represent.
Bill. I am Bill Fincher. I've been here, two weeks.
So I am the newest
person.
But, this is exciting testimony, and it's something that we've got to find a way to control
and protect people from the harmful effects. And I'm
law of this committee for the listening that you're doing,
the study you're doing, and I think we need
this is this is
it's life.
It's life threatening every day. Every day, it's out there in the forms that you can buy it in at the jokes at the
gas station. So we I'm I'm excited just to be a part of this committee.
I bring with me, a number of years of experience.
I was in
a prosecutor
for over thirty
three years,
in Atlanta here and also up in the Appalachian Circuit,
Blue Ridge, LAJ,
and Jasper.
I'm this is just
an opportunity for me, and I hope it's an opportunity for you to have my my turn on things because
prior to that, I was in the FBI. And so I I see it from a number of different angles.
But, my father's a pharmacist,
And I I grew up in a drugstore.
So I know there's there are some things, leaves and things that are
beneficial.
And, you know, there there's there may be a a benefit
if it's properly handled. So
my mind's wide open except that
I I I stand for those folks that who's lost loved ones. And and even if they didn't die, they've lost them,
to what they were to begin with in their lives. So
this is an honor for me to be here. I hope I can bring something to the table that will be valuable, and,
thank you for letting me speak about it.
Well, we appreciate your, your comment and your your your look forward to your breadth of experience and expertise.
I'm wondering why you weren't asking more questions today.
I'm I'm on a learning curve.
I understand. I was Glad to have you with us, and, mister chairman, thank you for mentioning that. I was remiss in not, pointing that out. I don't believe we have any further business before the committee today. We'll stand adjourned. Thank you, everybody.