Now, the seeds have been found in the Seekonk School District.
“We as human beings have a tendency to come up with different ways to become impaired, or however you want to describe it,” said Mace.
He’s referring to Sleepy Grass, Hawaiian Baby Woodrose, and Blue Morning Glory seeds.
The seeds have a hallucinogenic effect because they contain LSA, which is similar to LSD.
“Here we have a natural product that’s intended for ornamental purposes,
and somehow, someone figured out that it could cause a hallucinogenic
effect,” said Mace.
“Parents should know if their children are into planting flowers or not,
so if they see these things in the household, the radar should be on,
the red flag should go up.”
A memo from Seekonk Schools Superintendent Arlene Bosco about the seeds was posted on the Seekonk Police Department Facebook page.
She said the Somerset teens were not seriously hurt.
Bosco said the seeds could cause “auditory and visual hallucinations,
spatial and temporal distortion, introspection, and side effects such as
nausea and vomiting.”
The post said that the Somerset Home Depot had agreed to remove the
seeds from their shelves for the time being, but that many other stores
may sell the seeds.
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Thursday, May 12, 2016
Warning issued after teenagers hospitalized due to eating flower seeds in order to get high
The Seekonk Police Department in Massachusetts is warning parents that
some teenagers have been eating plant seeds in order to get high from
their hallucinogenic properties.
Police Chief Craig Mace said his department first heard of the problem
when some teens who had eaten the seeds in neighboring Somerset got
sick and were hospitalized.
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