The Vain Search for Marijuana in Trick-or-Treat Bags
Police are still pushing this discredited scare, but it seems fewer people are falling for it.

It's October, which means it's time for concerned cops and their credulous collaborators in the news media to warn us about the mythical menace of marijuana edibles in trick-or-treat bags. The police department in Bensalem, Pennsylvania, got a jump on the seasonal panic last week when it alerted parents to the danger that their kids might receive THC-laced products that look like ordinary treats when they go begging for candy on Halloween.
"As Halloween gets closer," a reporter for the ABC station in Philadelphia tweeted, "@BensalemPolice are warning parents to LOOK at your child's candy before they eat it. They confiscated these snacks that look a lot like the real thing. All are laced with THC."
Jaclyn Lee, the WPVI reporter who wrote that tweet, appended photographs that included packages of "Medicated Nerds Ropes," which Gas Buds, a California dispensary, sells for $15. You can buy the genuine, unmedicated product from Walmart for a buck.
Lee wants us to believe that people are willing to pay that sort of premium for the sake of a mean trick with consequences they would never witness. Even if such malevolent pranksters exist, their odds of success seem pretty low: All of the products in Lee's pictures are clearly marked as marijuana edibles, including clues such as cannabis leaves, THC content, and California's state-required warning label.
The Bucks County Courier Times reported that the Bensalem alert was triggered by the arrest of 20-year-old Philadelphia resident William Goodman, who was caught with "50 pieces of THC edibles packaged to closely resemble popular candy and snack foods" after he was pulled over for an expired temporary tag. Goodman "allegedly told police he orders the candy from California and sells [it] in the city."
Although there was no indication that any of the candy was intended for trick-or-treaters, that did not stop Bensalem Public Safety Director Fred Harran from speculating about what could happen. "Unfortunately, there's a lot of sick and evil people out there," Harran told the Courier Times. "This is the world we live in."
Is it? Not according to the Nexis news database, which contains many similar warnings since 1996, when California became the first state to legalize marijuana for medical use, but no documented cases of minors who accidentally got stoned by consuming cannabis candies distributed on Halloween. As Jane Hu noted in a 2019 Slate article, "there are no actual reports of this ever happening."
But fear springs eternal. Last year the Indiana State Police urged parents to "thoroughly check" their kids' Halloween hauls for marijuana edibles "packaged and marketed to look like candy," although it contradictorily warned them that they shouldn't "assume it's 'OK' just because it looks 'OK.'"
As in Bensalem, that alert was based on nothing more than the seizure of cannabis candy. In 2016, Bureau County, Illinois, Sheriff James Reed issued a similar warning with an even weaker basis: He mistook the maple leaves on Japanese candy wrappers for cannabis leaves.
Fears about malicious potheads bent on tricking kids into consuming THC are a variation on the old stories, going back at least to the 1950s, about razor blades, needles, and poison in seemingly innocuous treats such as candied apples and chocolate bars. University of Delaware sociologist Joel Best, who specializes in deconstructing popular panics, has studied the history of such Halloween scares.
"I couldn't find a single report of a child killed or seriously injured from a contaminated treat received during trick-or-treating," Best told CBC News in 2019. "This is a contemporary legend, and that's all it is."
In addition to the perennial appeal of Halloween horror stories, the cannabis candy scares reflect local reporters' disturbing tendency to uncritically repeat whatever police say. But judging from recent journalistic debunkings and the derisive responses to Lee's tweet—one of which depicted "local media" as a cat lapping water from a faucet labeled "easily disproven police press releases"—people are starting to wise up.
© Copyright 2021 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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"Come on, son, I know you're holding out on me, where's the marijuana?"
"Mom, I swear, there's nothing but candy in this bag."
"A likely story. You probably bogarted all the ganja, you selfish little boy."
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"Son, your mom and I have decided to get high. But we don't know how to score. Can you get some blunts for us?"
"We used to know where to get them. How do you think you were conceived in the first place?"
"That's it young man! Not another piece of ganja candy until you finish all your broken glass candy."
What about these 10 bags of pop rocks? Won't they explode in my belly or something?
"Jane Hu"
Who?
Contrary to rumor, she isn't a doctor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYb_nqU_43w
Oh, and #StopAsianHate.
There was a major league baseball player named Hu:
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/huch01.shtml
According to his stats, he was on first 38 different times (25 singles, 12 walks, and once hit-by-pitch).
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Now that the cops are distracted by the search for edibles, time for me to start handing out candy apples with razor blades and hypodermic needles in them.
The apples will still probably test positive for THC
and the city already hands out the needles for free
I really resent the police for this. They make Halloween into such a disappointment. My kid never gets any drugs in her candy.
Authorities endeavor to weed out bad candy.
It’s high on the to do list .
Seems like a pipe dream.
Seems like a pipe dream.
I have no idea to what you are reefering ...
Public stoning would seem a fitting punishment for the offender.
Seems like a win-win for parents who check their kid's candy. Free edibles.
Like when Red ate all the brownies he found?
As someone who came of age during the '70s that show really spoke to me. Red Foreman for President.
Sheesh. Most adults don't even shell out for a full sized Snickers. Who would pay $10-15 per trick or treater?
Exactly. One would have to be high to do that.
And if they did, they should be stoned.
Sounds like the "tiger repellent rock" meme. Local cops: "See, nothing happened at Halloween this year because we got the warning out."
Thin blue line. Your kids are safe because the union has our back.
In that last guys defense, japanese maple leaves look very much like marijuana leaves.
Yeah, I was thinking that's one of the dumber ones, but then I looked at the picture of the actual candy and I thought I could see someone making that mistake
I've seen the candy in real life. It sort of does look like pot. Only if you don't know what a maple leaf looks like.
As silly as their cartoons and game shows and video games are, I just can't imagine stoners in Japan.
"This is a contemporary legend, and that's all it is."
It does wonders for television news ratings this time of year.
Reporters, especially local TV reporters, are retards. And the best we could say about TV viewers is that they enjoy watching retards. More likely, all of them belong on the short bus.
Yes, retards. Probably all got Media or Communication degrees in college. And you know how stupid those students were. Plus the peroxide leaches into the brain.
Once it was Halloween razor blades. Now we can watch idiots panic over non-existent doped edibles. I can't wait for the next imaginary scare, perhaps candy with deadly racism?
I got a good one to start:
COVID infected candy. People with COVID, obviously Trump supporters, are sneezing on or licking the candy wrappers and then giving them to your kids.
Pass this on, FOR THE CHILDREN!!!!
Amos and Andy Halloween costumes! OMG!
What’s the big deal? It’s legal now.
When I was a kid the big deal was LSD temporary tattoos and LSD stamps. You lick them you started tripping ballz. But there was no such thing. Well sort of. There were LSD stamps. You licked them to get LSD. But the idea that they were being passed out to kids to get them hooked was utter bullshit. LSD isn't addictive. The stamps were just an easy way to hide the drugs. No one was passing them out for Halloween.
That didn't stop parents from panicking. Cops told them that and cops never lie (not even today, apparently). Combined with the emerging "stranger danger", the story was that shoddy men in white vans would pass out these stickers and stamps to get kicks tripping so they could kidnap and rape them. Never happened. NEVER. HAPPENED.
Yet even today people believe it. Even today some Reason commenter is going to come along and claim it was true.
We were taught to fear razor blades in apples. So if anyone gave us an apple, we tossed it and ate the candy instead. Which we would have done anyway.
I search my kids’ candy for drugs every year. Every year, I am disappointed.
But I do confiscate the Twizzlers. I love this fuckin things.
My kids usually run around like maniacs on Halloween night due to the sugar high. This year, they were asleep by 9. What gives?
OT
Mandatory warning labels on all penises:
If inserted into a vagina, may result in a pregnancy
It is legal in many states now, Mr. Sullum. You don't have to go trick or treating and hope to find some.
Of the $34 billion and climbing the Kleptocracy robs for prohibition enforcement, the DEA gets about 10 percent. How many Assassin of Youth hobgoblins could you make up to scare children and idiots with if you had $103 per person per annum to fund documendacities, terror shootings and asset forfeiture? And let's not forget there are another nine times that many dollars going to other violent liars profiting from pseudoscience and superstition.
Maybe they’re worried it could fuck up their profits:
“Wayne Jenkins from behind bars: 'I sold drugs as a dirty cop'”
Pretty harrowing report of what the cops were up to in Baltimore. Rampart level shit that was just recently exposed.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-58710164
Lee wants us to believe that people are willing to pay that sort of premium for the sake of a mean trick with consequences they would never witness.
Not that I think the warnings are legitimate (I don't), but the reasoning here is pretty weak. People expend time, effort (and even money) on malicious actions that they never see the outcome of all the time. Many, many computer viruses and other forms of malware, for instance.
How would they ever find the marijuana beneath the piles of razor blades, broken glass and needles?