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A “new” drug, called “Flakka” or “gravel” in the South Florida region where most of the recent coverage is emanating from, is actually a substance whose full and proper name is alpha-Pyrrolidinopentiophenone – alpha-PVP or a-PVP. First of all, it’s not new. It was originally synthesized in the 1960s, and is related to the cathinone (aka “bath salt”) class of drugs. It has been on the market for at least a few years now, and has already caused a few deaths. Probably the highest profile of these was Adonis Escoto, who died after last year’s Ultra Music Festival in Miami. Even before that death, some stories (and a rational takedown) had come out about it. Recent media coverage is trotting out claims that alpha-PVP is “stronger than” meth or cocaine and “highly addictive.” For a substance for which there is remarkably little human use history and even less scientific research, please feel free to take these claims with a giant grain of (bath) salt. What we do know about alpha-PVP is that it can cause some very irrational behavior at high doses – which may explain stories about people running around naked or trying to break into police stations. In this way it is similar to other cathinone class drugs, which in turn are similar to amphetamines. But let’s rocket this sharply back to the real reason we’re even seeing these stories: our failed drug prohibition policy driving the creation of new synthetic drugs.