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News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Latest Drug Craze: Embalming Fluid (Honest!)
Title:US PA: Latest Drug Craze: Embalming Fluid (Honest!)
Published On:2001-07-27
Source:Morning Call (PA)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 12:45:03
LATEST DRUG CRAZE: EMBALMING FLUID (HONEST!)

Users buy cigarettes dipped in it to smoke; it can make them psychotic as
well as high. It hasn't hit here -- yet.

In Hartford, it is called "illie" and comes in harmless looking bags
decorated with cartoon characters. In Philly, it's not illie, it's "wet."
In Los Angeles, it is known as "sherm."

By any name, it's trouble.

Embalming fluid, long used as a chemical to slow the decomposition of the
dead, more recently is being used by the living as a way to get high.

Users -- mostly teens and those in their 20s -- are spending about $20 to
buy tobacco or marijuana cigarettes dipped in embalming fluid and dried.

While local drug counselors, funeral directors and police were not aware of
a problem in the Lehigh Valley, a 14-year-old boy in Morrisville, Bucks
County, high on "wet" that he bought in Trenton, N.J., stabbed a
33-year-old neighbor to death in May 2000. The teen is serving a seven-year
juvenile sentence for the killing.

And Reading juvenile probation officer Julie Kirlin told The Associated
Press: "Some people around here think it's just a city problem, but it's not."

Users who want embalming fluid often get it with PCP, phencyclidine,
interspersed. Leading to more confusion, PCP since the 1970s has been known
in street drug lingo as "embalming fluid."

The chemical "tends to make people psychotic and very paranoid and
aggressive," Dr. Julie Holland, a drug expert who works in the psychiatric
emergency room at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, said Thursday night.

Holland, editor of the book, "Ecstasy: The Complete Guide," added that
"someone who smokes marijuana might be intrigued, because this is a new
type of marijuana."

The chemical, she said, "separates you from your mind" and can cause users
to hallucinate.

The chemical also can cause users to become violent. The Morrisville
juvenile stabbed his neighbor more than 70 times.

In New York, the chemical is known alternately as "hydro" and "wet."

Capt. Joseph Stauffer, commander of the Allentown Police Department's
Criminal Investigations Division, said trends in New York and Philadelphia
often make their way here.

Still, he said, "That is something that, to my knowledge, we have not come
across. Nothing would surprise me. Just about everything has been tried --
or probably will be."

Margaret Mary Hartnett, administrator of the Lehigh County Office of Drug
and Alcohol Abuse Services, has heard about embalming fluid use in other
areas, but not locally.

"I have been in this field 11 years, and it is just amazing what these kids
can come up with to use as highs," she said. "Remember that whole thing
with inhalants, and kids were sticking their faces in paint cans?"

Drug users in Lehigh County, she said, are younger and sicker, and more are
using multiple drugs and have dual mental health and substance abuse disorders.

Funeral directors in Seattle were warned that youngsters might try to swipe
their embalming fluid.

Local funeral directors can't fathom why someone would want to ingest the
nostril-clearing fluid in any form.

They use gloves and eye protection when handling embalming fluid, which is
injected into an artery following death to aid in the preservation process.

"My goodness, that is strange," said Jane C. Pearson, supervisor of Pearson
Funeral Home Inc. in Bethlehem.

She said embalming fluid, which has glutaraldehyde and other additives, has
an unpleasant "pungent" odor all its own.

"It makes my eyes water," she said. "I can't imagine what smoking it would do."

Told that her supplies of embalming fluid might be coveted by some teens,
Debbie Ashton, director of Ashton Funeral Home Inc. in Easton, noted, "They
kind of want to see us before they need to see us."

"It's not pleasant to be around for long, I can't imagine soaking it and
smoking it," she added. "It doesn't sound like a pleasant thing to do. I
don't know who gave them the idea."

The Associated Press contributed to this report
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