|      Hundreds of law enforcement officers on Friday raided Southern    California auto parts shops and other businesses suspected of illegally    selling nitrous oxide for use as a recreational drug, in what federal    authorities said was the nation's largest such raid to date. Authorities served search    warrants on 17 businesses and nine delivery vehicles during the simultaneous    raids in Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside counties, and three people were    arrested on misdemeanor charges of misbranding a drug in violation of the    federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. A fourth person named in a federal    warrant was being sought by authorities. The operation was the    result of a year-and-a-half-long joint investigation dubbed "No Laughing    Matter" by the Food and Drug Administration's    Office of Criminal Investigations and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's    Department. During the operation, federal agents seized 367 tanks or 36,000    pounds of nitrous oxide with a street value of $20 million, said Andre Birotte Jr., U.S. attorney for the Central    District of California. "Our investigation    has revealed and uncovered evidence that many of these shops don't contain    any auto supplies at all, just tanks of nitrous oxide," Birotte said. The FDA has recently    focused on the illegal use of nitrous oxide, and this was its largest case to    date, said special agent Lisa Hartsell. Though nitrous oxide, also known as    "laughing gas" or "noz," has long been a rave phenomenon,    it has recently grown into more mainstream use, propelled by the ease of    social media to reach young people and spread the word. "This is a very    cheap drug, can be had very easily, it is not a controlled substance, so your    big members of the law enforcement community don't have the ability to    control it," Hartsell said. The gas is legally used    by dentists for anesthesia, to pressurize whipped cream canisters and to    speed up race cars. But authorities say its illegal use has spurred fatal car    accidents, rapes and teen deaths — all in the name of a temporary high. "We believe these    individuals are selling this nitrous oxide knowing full well that it's not    going to be used to accelerate a race car or for a dental office, it's being    used for the party scene," Birotte said. If ingested at high    levels, nitrous oxide can cause death from lack of oxygen; it can also lead    to spasms, convulsions and other health problems. Nitrous oxide is also    considered a greenhouse gas and is 310 times more dangerous to the Earth's    ozone layer than carbon dioxide, said Joseph Johns, chief of the U.S.    attorney's environmental crimes section. "The amount of gas    that was taken off the streets today, is equivalent to one year's worth of    carbon dioxide emissions from a small petroleum refinery in the heart of Los Angeles," Johns said. He said the investigation    is ongoing. "These (raids) are    the initial baby steps," and more charges would likely be filed in the    next weeks, Johns said. Los    Angeles County sheriff's    officials have zeroed in on the recreational use of nitrous oxide since    September, cracking down on more than 350 illegal parties, spokesman Mike    Parker said Thursday. The operations are part    of a new team set up by the Sheriff's Department over the last six months to    monitor social media around the clock. The team has found many public posts    that target teens and advertise alcohol and illegal drugs such as nitrous    oxide. "They're doing the    social media equivalent of standing outside the front doors of a high school    at 3 o'clock as school lets out with a megaphone announcing that there'll be    drugs, noz and alcohol for children, and then handing out fliers to all the    kids that are interested," Parker said. These parties can be    lucrative for those provisioning them. Sheriff's deputies have been tracking    one distributor who is making more than $60,000 a month in the bulk sale of    nitrous oxide, said Sgt. Glenn Walsh, who works in the Sheriff's Department's    narcotics bureau. Hartsell said the drugs    have also spurred armed robberies as gangs steal tanks from each other. Part of the problem for    law enforcement officers going after the illegal use of nitrous oxide is that    its distribution or use as a recreational drug is only a misdemeanor,    officials said. Sheriff's Lt. Rod Armalin    said the department is working on legislation to increase the penalties. Nitrous oxide isn't the    only dangerous substance teens are turning to for a quick and cheap high. On    Monday, a 14-year-old Los Angeles honors student died after inhaling computer    keyboard dust cleaner, apparently to get high. Aria Doherty's sister found    her in bed with a can of compressed air cleaning product attached to her    mouth. Earlier this month, a    12-year-old San Bernardino County girl, Kristal Salcido, died after inhaling    Freon from an air conditioner.  |    
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