A Federal Prison Was Warned About Synthetic Marijuana. Then Inmates Started Overdosing.
"We are living in pure chaos," an incarcerated woman at a federal prison in Minnesota tells Reason following a string of suspected overdoses.

In February, an advocacy group warned the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) that there was a severe problem with synthetic marijuana inside a federal women's prison in Minnesota. Women were vomiting, hallucinating, and having seizures after smoking the contraband drug.
Nothing happened, besides a perfunctory reply from the warden about the agency's commitment to safety.
Last week, at least seven women at the same prison were sent to a local hospital for suspected drug overdoses, and incarcerated women and attorneys say the conditions inside are chaotic, filthy, and violent because of rampant abuse of the dangerous drug.
"Last week, out of an abundance of caution, the Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Waseca sent seven incarcerated individuals exhibiting signs of drug use to a local hospital for additional evaluation," a BOP spokesperson confirmed to Reason. "All were evaluated and returned the same day."
"The [BOP] takes seriously our duty to protect the individuals entrusted in our custody, as well as to keep correctional employees and the community safe, by maintaining a controlled environment that is secure and humane," the spokesperson continued.
The conditions at FCI Waseca, which holds roughly 900 women, are part of the wider, chronic dysfunction and poor conditions inside the federal prison system. Earlier this year, the BOP shut down a women's prison in California that had become a notorious haven for corrupt and sexually abusive guards. (All of the women at that prison, FCI Dublin, were transferred to other prisons, including FCI Waseca.) Congress also passed a bill in July creating independent oversight of the BOP after congressional investigations documented widespread corruption and abuse at other federal prison complexes.
The Biden administration appointed Colette Peters, the former head of the Oregon prison system, to turn around the troubled agency in 2022, but it's a monumental task.
Among the problems plaguing the BOP—understaffing, cover-up culture, crumbling facilities, and atrocious medical neglect—is contraband drugs. Synthetic marijuana, commonly called "K2" or "spice," is especially popular in prison systems and jails across the country because it's cheap, easy to smuggle, and doesn't show up in routine urine screenings. However, advocacy groups and incarcerated women say K2 abuse is worse than usual at FCI Waseca.
Catherine Sevcenko, senior counsel with the National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, an abolitionist organization, says she has been fielding regular emails from women at FCI Waseca about the drug problem there since at least last December.
"The descriptions of being locked up with someone who is hallucinating, aggressive, unable to control their bodily functions, and ready to do anything to get their next high are horrifying," she tells Reason.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, synthetic marijuana, a catch-all category for hundreds of different lab-made drugs that target the same receptors in the brain as marijuana, can cause agitation, violent delusions, seizures, breathing problems, and heart attacks.
"The women at Waseca are desperate," Sevcenko continues. "They want their emails shared, risking retaliation from the prison, which could include time in solitary confinement, being unable to speak to their families for weeks or months, or loss of good time credits. They email me nearly every day saying they are scared for their safety. And with good reason. Waseca's public track record is abysmal."
Three women have died at FCI Waseca since 2023: two from suicide and one, Sevcenko alleges, from medical neglect.
This February, Sevcenko sent a letter to the warden of FCI Waseca detailing accounts from inside the prison about women smoking K2 and vomiting, having diarrhea, seizures, and hallucinations. Users became aggressive and paranoid. Addiction and drug debts were leading to violence and theft.
The Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment requires that incarcerated people be held in generally safe and hygienic conditions, and Sevcenko warned that the prison's failure to stop the introduction and use of K2 may violate the Constitution.
"Everyone who has reached out to us believes that someone will die, whether from over dose or being attacked, if things do not change quickly," Sevcenko wrote.
A week later, the warden replied, although his letter was little more than a restatement of BOP policy.
"I would like to assure you that the Bureau of Prisons is committed to providing a safe and healthful environment for individuals in our custody, as well as our staff," FCI Waseca Warden Michael Segal wrote. "The introduction and use of illicit substances within our facilities is prohibited and the prevention of such remains a priority to all Bureau staff. At FCI Waseca, procedures exist to prevent and detect the introduction of contraband into the facility, as well as to prevent and detect the use of illicit substances inside the facility."
Those incarcerated at FCI Waseca say those procedures have done nothing to stop widespread drug use in the prison. They also say the number of hospitalizations provided by the BOP understates the scope of the problem.
"We are living in pure chaos and have been for months on end, with no end in sight," Holli Wrice, who is currently incarcerated at FCI Waseca, writes to Reason in an email, which has been edited slightly for clarity. "It was 12 women to be exact. Two had to be resuscitated. It was a total of 38 women that fell out in a matter of 6 days, and there were numerous others that staff were not aware of that other inmates threw cold water on to bring them out of the state they were in."
In May of last year, the Justice Department Office of the Inspector General released the results of an inspection of FCI Waseca. The report found that the prison is "generally well-run, with dedicated staff and an environment in which both inmates and staff generally reported feeling safe."
However, the Inspector General also cited a "significant challenge limiting the amount of contraband in the institution, specifically drugs (synthetic cannabinoids and illicitly acquired opioid use disorder medication)." In addition, the report noted "serious facility issues," such as roofs that routinely leak and women being housed in basement cells with beds next to leaking pipes.
A BOP spokesperson says an investigation into last week's incidents at FCI Waseca is ongoing.
Sevcenko says the women inside FCI Waseca can't wait.
"A prison sentence should not be a death sentence," she says. "But if the BOP doesn't do something soon, women are going to die."
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If only they could be locked in cells, unable to get the drugs - - - - - - - -
Hey. The guards have to have a side gig to make out.
Woman's prison with guards making out? I think I have seen that movie in the adult section of the video store
Twat is the news telling me here? Imprisoned people can get DRUGS?!?!? HOW could this be?
Well I guess that shit tells us that we could turn the USA into one giant prison... I mean, MORE than shit is already... And people would STILL get (and often abuse themselves with) drugs!!!
Whoa, wait, now TWAT does this tell us about the "war on drugs"? Can anyone give me a clue, please?
Same rationale applies to assault weapons.
Yes, and also to cheap plastic "lung flutes"!
Butt don’t you see, SOME professions NEED to be SUPER-highly educated to that they can PROTECT us benighted peons! Think of super-highly edumacated DOCTORS of Expert Medical Doctorology, who protect us from the use of not-properly-authorized DANGEROUS medical implements of mass death and destruction, such ass cheap plastic flutes, AKA, the dreaded, complex and dangerous LUNG FLUTE!!!
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
If your in jail, don't do drugs of any type. Am I supposed to feel sympathy over this non story?
Also if ye are in jail for messy housekeeping, do NOT engage in MORE messy housekeeping in your jail cell there!!!
"A Federal Prison Was Warned About Synthetic Marijuana. Then Inmates Started Overdosing."
What the hell were prison inmates doing with weed?
Prisoners do something bad to themselves, prison officials to blame. Did I get that right? Whereas if the Prison cracked down on the prison, the prison was being too harsh on poor prisoners. Damned if you, damned if you don't.
Which is why guard morale is so high?
Where is it high?
After a few bowls.
So much for personal responsibility, eh Reason? It's definitely the prison's fault that the shitwad inmates, who already broke the law, are illegally smuggling in illegal drugs and using them. Illegally.
And why is any of this a problem anyway? You are the champions of Illicit drug use and its obvious side effects. It's the main plank of the LP, after all.
If you don't want to risk going blind don't drink the prison toilet bowl hooch, if you don't wanna odie on the syntheweed, which has likely spent some time up somebody's ass. Don't smoke the shit jus sayin.
If synthetic marijuana were legal in prisons, the FDA would've been able to regulate it for purity and efficacy and none of this would've happened. The criminalization of drugs within prisons is to blame.
And the government could tax it. Goodbye budget cuts forever.
Except "Reason" is opposed to FDA regulation and taxation.
If you take some, and it kills you, then that will tell you to find a different supplier next time.
If true this is obviously a fucked up deal for the inmates. At the same time my anti prohibitionist libertarian principles leave me in a quandary here. And the description reads a little like Reefer Madness. I know nothing about this K shit. The little MJ I use grows right out of god's green earth. Seems the only libertarian solution is to crack down on the fake shit and open a discount dispensary in the prison. Problem solved. I'm a problem solver. It's what I do.
Or….. just really lock the shit down and they get nothing.
They’re inmates in a prison FFS. Why does their appetite for drugs need to be indulged? What’s next, cocktail hour?
+1 If you feel the need to inhale anything, we've got plenty of extra nitrogen.
Indeed. I’ve been saying for decades that prisons should make more regular use of their gas chambers. Including the asshole in Idaho who murdered my great uncle. He’s been on death row for over forty three years.
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/09/05/us/colt-gray-suspect-georgia-shooter/index.html
Troon violence is a scourge that needs to be addressed
Very fucked up family and the state is once again visiting the sins of the son on the father. I'm not reaching any conclusions at this point but I don't like this novel legal theory much.
I also am not a fan of this.
So what is the libertarian solution? Aren't libertarians in favor of legalizing drugs, especially marijuana? So what is the problem here - that the inmates aren't getting enough of it?
Reason doesn't do solutions. Just "We're way better than those other guys," and "Those other guys are equally bad all the time on every issue."
Alcohol is already legal, and prisoners aren't allowed to possess or consume that in prison either. So it doesn’t matter if pot is legal or not. Prisoners shouldn’t have it.
But if they do get it, why should we care if it's below standards and dangerous?
Big surprise, right? The drug war is the same drugged-out war in prison as in the real world, and the results are probably worse. If we confine people like human garbage in miserable conditions, we reap what we sow. If there is sewage leaking into your cell, wouldn't you want to get high too? If someone comes into prison addicted to heroin, shouldn't they have the same treatment options, e.g. methadone or buprenorphine, they may have had before going to prison? Sure, there would be problems with that, but how could those problems be worse than those obtaining now?
The answer to most of this is money, of course. Proactive, ongoing facility maintenance, more and better staff, newer smaller prisons and jails, all desirable and all expensive. But for the most part we aren't interested in spending money on human garbage: "Let's lock 'em up and watch 'em rot. They deserve it." I find it ironic that death-penalty advocates think death is worse than life in prison.
Women were vomiting, hallucinating, and having seizures after smoking the contraband drug.
So, it was 100% avoidable. Like getting butchered in a back-alley abortion. Got it.
Among the problems plaguing the BOP—understaffing, cover-up culture, crumbling facilities, and atrocious medical neglect—is contraband drugs.
The same ones you're constantly going on about legalizing and forcing on society against it's overwhelming will. Got it.
However, criminal justice advocates and incarcerated women say K2 abuse is worse than usual at FCI Waseca.
Man, they just want to have some fun. Be cool, narc.
"The descriptions of being locked up with someone who is hallucinating, aggressive, unable to control their bodily functions, and ready to do anything to get their next high are horrifying," she tells Reason.
I have been assured by drug-legalization advocates (whose stoner junkie degenerate qualifications I have no reason to deny) that such a thing never happens and that they all just chill and relax. And that this is definitely never a danger or problem for the rest of their local community.
Users became aggressive and paranoid. Addiction and drug debts were leading to violence and theft.
Unequivocally not true. I have hundreds of Reason articles, and even more user comments, that expressly dispute precisely this.
Well, then again, they might be high when they write that stuff and not in touch with reality... but, well... hmm.
"We are living in pure chaos and have been for months on end, with no end in sight, [said] Holli Wrice"
Around here, Holli, we call that The Libertarian Dream. How about you stop complaining and get on board.
"A prison sentence should not be a death sentence," she says. "But if the BOP doesn't do something soon, women are going to die."
Jeez, reeeeelax already. Worst case scenario is that a couple inmates relax. Maybe get the munchies. Right guys?
Guys???
^^^^ times a thousand.
One federal candidate from MN is of the Democratic party, whose platform does not offer harmless real marijuana to replace fake poisons. The Libertarian candidate and platform call for decriminalization--no goons with guns interfering in plant leaf markets. Which more closely matches the dictionary meaning of liberal: Adjective: Willing to respect or accept behavior or opinions different from one's own; open to new ideas. p.s. God's Own Prohibitionist party wants potheads gunned down by cops with immunity.
Seriously, why should we care? I don't think people in prison should be forcibly prevented from poisoning themselves any more than people in the outside world should.
The problem is the same on the outside as it is on the inside. Drug users are incapable of containing their damage to “themselves.” That’s the whole crux of this article. It’s not the druggies that are complaining, it’s the normal people in relative proximity to them who have to suffer their derivative effects of their using.
This is why we can’t tolerate drug use in society any more than we should in prison. They destroy everything around them. Honestly, we ought to segregate the prison system. One for normal criminals, and another – a far worse one – for drug criminals. Users, possession, dealers, manufacturers - normal prison ain't right for them. They need inescapable gulags from which they never return.
It is fun reading the front page of this site:
The government needs to legalize all controlled substances!
next
How dare the government allow people to use controlled substances!