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News (Media Awareness Project) - US TN: Toxic Drugs Billed As Ecstasy Blamed In Two Teen Deaths
Title:US TN: Toxic Drugs Billed As Ecstasy Blamed In Two Teen Deaths
Published On:2001-04-03
Source:Commercial Appeal (TN)
Fetched On:2008-01-26 19:34:24
TOXIC DRUGS BILLED AS ECSTASY BLAMED IN TWO TEEN DEATHS

A bad batch of drugs being sold as Ecstasy has killed two teenagers who
died Sunday and Monday, according to city police.

Police Director Walter Crews said the victims, a boy and a girl, both 17,
died of some type of poisoning after taking what they believed to be the
party drug Ecstasy. The two died in separate incidents.

Crews would not name the victims, but said one was an east Shelby County
boy who died at Saint Francis Hospital early Monday.

The other was a girl from Corinth, Miss., who apparently purchased the
drugs in Memphis and made it back to Corinth before being airlifted to the
Regional Medical Center at Memphis, where she died early Sunday.

"We're actively investigating these two deaths," Crews said. "Again, we
think they were the result of these young people having bought and taken
designer drugs that were poisonous to their system."

Police said the two victims did not know each other and that the purchases
were made separately, according to witnesses.

Witnesses have told police the victims thought they were using Ecstasy.

Deputy Chief R. G. Wright said there is a new drug similar to Ecstasy
called PMA that has been linked to several deaths nationwide.

"I think it's important to remember that any of these designer drugs are
actually homemade drugs," he said.

". . .The people cook them up at their homes or whatever, stamp the pills
out and sell them on the street.

"So when you are buying you don't have any idea exactly what potency you're
buying."

Crews said police hope Ecstasy buyers will be wary they are "taking their
life into their own hands.

"This is a very dangerous situation," he said. "We think we have some
significant evidence that will lead us to the source."

Crews would not say where or how the purchases took place. He said it is
still under investigation.

"It's so fresh (the case) the lab reports haven't come back yet," he said.

But Crews said police are issuing the warning to protect the public.

"What we don't want to happen is when night falls in Memphis, Tennessee,
this evening, young people in our city go out and purchase some of this
compound and find themselves in the same state as these other two," he said.

Ecstasy is a popular party drug that emerged from the Rave dance culture
and has now spread throughout the nightclub scene in Memphis, according to
Asst. Dist. Atty. Gen. Bobby Carter, director of the West Tennessee
Judicial Drug Task Force. Rave events are all-night dance parties.

Ecstasy is said to heighten one's sensitivities to the lights and sounds of
the parties, as well as give the user a warm, euphoric feeling.

Carter said the drug, often found in tablet form with some image or logo
stamped on it, is also called "X" or "rolls" on the street, where it can be
purchased for $30 to $35 a tablet.

While the most common form of the drug is a pill or tablet, it is also
available in powder and liquid forms. It often is taken with other illegal
drugs or alcohol.

"I would call it a stimulant with hallucinogenic properties," Carter said.
"We're seeing it more and more. It's making inroads into the powder cocaine
market."

Carter said new legislation that will take effect July 1 will increase the
penalty for possessing 100 grams or more of the drug, which is considered
possession with intent to distribute. The current penalty is 8 to 30 years;
the new penalty will be 15 to 60 years, he said.

A report from the Office of National Drug Control Policy released two weeks
ago said that use of Ecstasy is moving from raves and nightclubs to high
schools, streets and places frequented by adolescents and young adults.

In addition, the popularity of the drug, traditionally used by Caucasians,
has driven an increase in use by African-Americans and Hispanics, the
report said.

Ecstasy use among 8th, 10th and 12th graders rose sharply between 1999 and
2000, the report said.

And more than 80 percent of communities surveyed nationwide reported an
increase in availability of the drug in 2000.

ECSTASY DANGERS

The National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institutes of Health
report that Ecstasy users can face:

- - Psychological difficulties including confusion, severe anxiety,
depression and paranoia.

- - Physical symptoms including muscle tension, nausea, chills or sweating.

- - An increase in heart rate and blood pressure, which provide an even
greater risk for people with circulatory and heart disease.

- - In addition, research links ecstasy to long-term damage to parts of the
brain critical to thought and memory.
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