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Pot Brownie Surprise

By: Nick McGurk, KUSA
Updated: December 12, 2012
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(KUSA) According to campus police, two students, Thomas Ricardo Cunningham, 21, and Mary Elizabeth Essa, 19, baked THC-laced brownies for the class as part of a "bring food day."

The pair will appear in Boulder County court Monday morning.

Eight people who ate the brownies got sick and 3 were hospitalized.

"[Cunningham] definitely was not, had no intent of hurting anybody," said longtime friend and roommate, Brooks Rice.

"Don't judge," said Rice "Mistakes happen, some bigger than others."

"They had baked those brownies, and put THC or some type of marijuana substance into the brownies," said Ryan Huff, spokesperson for University of Colorado Boulder Police Department.

The professor and classmates were unaware that the brownies contained THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the active ingredient in marijuana.

UCPD responded to the Hellems Arts and Sciences Building Friday on a report of a professor who was complaining of dizziness and going in and out of consciousness.

A student's mother notified campus police that her daughter, who attended the aforementioned professor's class, was at a local hospital having an anxiety attack.

On Saturday, police got another report that a second student felt like she was going to "blackout" after the class.

Her family took her to the hospital for evaluation.

An investigation revealed that the three hospitalized victims and five other classmates were suffering from the effects of THC.

"This was just a stupid, irresponsible act," said Bronson Hilliard, CU's spokesperson.

He and Huff, with UCPD, say the incident had nothing to do with Amendment 64 and the looming legalization of small amounts of marijuana.

"Putting marijuana in a food product and providing it somebody without their knowledge has always been illegal, and that will continue to be illegal, even after Amendment 64," Huff said.

9NEWS legal analyst Scott Robinson says, on paper, the charges could add up to decades in prison, but he says that likely won't happen.

"A prank can quickly turn into a felony charge and a felony conviction record. If there was no truly evil intent, the likelihood is that these young people will get probation," Robinson said.

Possessing and using small amounts of marijuana will soon be legal in Colorado for adults 21 and older.

But under Colorado law, drugging someone without their consent is a serious crime.

Read More: http://on9news.tv/12hrLUY

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