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		water mark: active marijuana ingredient found in U.S. town well 
			
   
            
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		[July 22, 2016] 
		By Keith Coffman 
			
		DENVER (Reuters) - Residents of a small 
		farming community in eastern Colorado have been warned to avoid drinking 
		the town’s water after THC, the psychoactive agent in marijuana, was 
		found in one of its feeder wells, authorities said on Thursday. 
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			 A public works employee in Hugo, a town of about 800 people 90 miles 
			southeast of Denver, detected the chemical and health officials 
			believe it is “marijuana THC-related,” the Lincoln County Sheriff’s 
			Office said in a Facebook posting. 
			 
			“At this time, investigators are assessing the situation with state 
			and federal authorities,” the sheriff’s office said. “Bathroom usage 
			is still safe, but until more information is known to us, out of an 
			abundance of caution, avoid drinking Town of Hugo water.” 
			 
			Susan Kelly, the county’s public health director, said there were no 
			reports of anyone falling ill or otherwise being affected by the 
			tainted water. 
			 
			Colorado allows both medical and recreational marijuana use. But it 
			was unclear how THC got into the water, as there are no legal 
			marijuana cultivation sites or dispensaries in the area, according 
			to the Colorado Department of Revenue, which regulates the state’s 
			cannabis industry. 
			
			  
			Captain Michael Yowell of the sheriff’s office said there was 
			evidence that the well was tampered with, and that the FBI and 
			Colorado Bureau of Investigation have joined the probe. 
			 
			The initial screening was done with a “field testing kit,” Yowell 
			told reporters, and the state health department would conduct more 
			through testing. The level of contamination detected was not 
			specified. 
			 
			The Lincoln County health department said in an alert that residents 
			should avoid drinking, cooking or bathing with the town’s water for 
			at least 48 hours. 
			
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			“The contaminated well has been identified and shut down and the 
			lines are being flushed,” the alert said. “Fresh water will be 
			coming into town for the public as soon as possible.” 
			Peter Perrone, a chemist and owner of the state-licensed cannabis 
			testing facility, Gobi Analytical in suburban Denver, said he was 
			skeptical of the reports. 
			 
			“It’s virtually impossible to find THC in water in concentrated 
			levels because cannabinoids are not water soluble,” Perrone told 
			Reuters in a telephone interview. 
			 
			Yowell said he understands that some are questioning how THC could 
			be found in the water, but that does not explain why the tests came 
			up positive for the chemical. 
			 
			“I wouldn’t be doing my job for the community if we just wrote this 
			off,” he said. 
			 
			(Editing by Steve Gorman and Nick Macfie) 
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