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Carfentanil found in product resembling cannabis in Tecumseh

Windsor-Essex Community Opioid& Substance Strategy has issued an alert for the community.

A similar product was found in Ohio containing heroin and fentanyl

Medium shot of a police cruiser with the letters marked OPP, for Ontario Provincial Police.
Tecumseh OPP seized a drug that resembles cannabis but turns out to be carfentanil. (File Photo)

A product resembling cannabis was found to contain carfentanil in Tecumseh by OPP.

According to Windsor-Essex Community Opioid& Substance Strategy, this was first flagged in an alert in other regions on May 21.

The presence of carfentanil was confirmed May 23, according to the alert sent by WECOSS.

"There is no cannabis in this product," says the alert.

On May 21, Waterloo Region Integrated Drugs Strategy sounded the alarm for this substance. After the drug was formally confirmed, it said on Twitter that the substance is "carfentanil that has been disguised to resemble cannabis."

There was a similar product containing heroin and fentanyl seized in Ohio as well.

Windsor police said it hasn't encountered any similar substances in its jurisdiction, but that people should be more wary.

"If consuming cannabis, make sure to know your source," Windsor police said in a tweet.

Brandon Bailey, member of the Windsor Overdose Prevention Society, said the photo he has seen of the product actually looks nothing like cannabis, and that cannabis users may feel law enforcement and health units are fear mongering "because of their anti-cannabis stance."

But he still wants to get more photos from police whenever they find something. CBCnews has not obtained any photos of the carfentanil seized in Tecumseh from OPP.

"I think it's very important that we see what they're finding, so we know what to be able to warn people on the streets with," said Bailey.

He's not surprised that carfentanil is present in the community.

"If we are keeping drugs illegal and criminalizing people who use drugs, they're going to continue to come up with a stronger, street illicit supply and that's just how prohibition works," he said.

Clarifications

  • In a previous version of the story, Brandon Bailey was quoted as saying that law enforcement and health units are just fear mongering. However, Bailey was specifically talking about how certain cannabis users could see law enforcement and health units as fear mongering because of their stance on cannabis.
    May 24, 2019 9:25 PM ET