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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Dangerous Club-Drug Knockoffs Surge
Title:US: Dangerous Club-Drug Knockoffs Surge
Published On:2002-07-22
Source:USA Today (US)
Fetched On:2008-08-30 04:31:12
DANGEROUS CLUB-DRUG KNOCKOFFS SURGE

Drug dealers hoping to capitalize on the popularity of club drugs are
trying to pass off a variety of chemical concoctions as Ecstasy pills.

The pills are appearing at dance clubs and all-night dance parties or raves
in California, Oregon, Ohio, Florida and at least 10 other states. Last
month, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement issued an alert for two of
the drugs, known as Foxy and AMT.

Although drug experts regard Ecstasy as harmful itself, health and law
enforcement officials warn that the use of research chemicals is
particularly hazardous because scientists have not studied their effects.
The Florida warning calls the drugs "potentially dangerous."

Of particular concern are:

* Foxy, also called Methoxy Foxy, which is known chemically as 5-MeO-DIPT.
It is a hallucinogen that comes in tablets and capsules. Users report
diarrhea, nausea, severe anxiety and a high or "buzzing" that can last 14
hours.

* AMT, also called IT-290 and known chemically as alpha-methyltryptamine.
It is a hallucinogen that usually comes in a capsule with orange or
off-white powder. Users experience increased energy, empathy, visual
patterns, nausea, headaches, vomiting and jaw clenching.

The chemicals used to produce the fake Ecstasy tablets and capsules are
sold legally for scientific use. However, dealers who purchase them,
usually via the Internet, and sell them can be prosecuted under federal and
state laws that ban trafficking in drugs that mimic the effects of illegal
drugs.

Both drugs mimic some of the effects of Ecstasy, which has stimulant and
hallucinogenic properties and produces a feeling of sensuous well-being.
Foxy and AMT, however, produce more intense hallucinations without the warm
and fuzzy feeling.

"About half the pills we test are not (Ecstasy)," says Tim Santamour,
executive director of DanceSafe. His organization tests pills for
3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), the chemical component of
Ecstasy, in an effort to reduce harm on users, most of whom are in their
teens or 20s.

"Drug dealers know there is a market for Ecstasy right now, and they are
willing to put their customers at risk," Santamour says. "It's a black
market so there's no regulation."

Ecstasy users who end up with Foxy or AMT are in for a "big surprise," he
says. "The high is nothing like that of Ecstasy. It's a psychedelic trip."

AMT and Foxy are the most recent additions to a list of Ecstasy fakes that
users call "bunk." Dealers also try to pass off pain relievers, caffeine,
amphetamines and a chemical used in cough suppressant as Ecstasy.

Ecstasy users in Portland, Ore., first reported Foxy about a year ago as a
purple pill stamped with an alien. In January, the alien-stamped pills
surfaced in Oakland. Over the next four months, a new batch of Foxy pills
stamped with a spider appeared in Sacramento, Oakland, Portland and
Albuquerque, according to www.pillreports.com, a Web site that compiles
reports on pills from users.
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