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Later, the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department indicated (also via Twitter) that "Health Officials Law Enforcement Officers, and Emergency Managers are all involved in this situation," and added that bottled water would be arriving soon. Testing was ordered, the account said, after residents complained, but added, somewhat puzzlingly that there was "no level of concentration," and "no symptoms to anyone."Sanho Tree, director of the Drug Policy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, told VICE that the THC found in marijuana buds, if it were in the water, wouldn't actually get anyone high. "It would have to be decarboxylated first," he said, referring to the necessary process by which THC becomes psychoactive. "Hash oil and concentrates aren't really water soluble," Tree added.THC, and the other psychoactive compounds in weed can be extracted with water (as they were in this video from our colleagues at Munchies), but it takes further preparation to turn that into something that gets you high.Neither the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department, nor the Hugo Marshal's Office, which also tweeted about the contamination, would immediately return requests for comment, or take any steps toward explaining how the contamination had occurred.A press conference is scheduled for 7 PM MDT at the Hugo Courthouse.Follow Mike Pearl on Twitter.