News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Agents Warn of New Drug Hitting U.S. |
Title: | US: Agents Warn of New Drug Hitting U.S. |
Published On: | 2008-01-04 |
Source: | Detroit News (MI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-11 15:45:12 |
AGENTS WARN OF NEW DRUG HITTING U.S.
Federal Officials Say 'Extreme Ecstasy' Is a Potent Drug Laced With
Methamphetamines.
Federal agents are targeting a turbo-charged form of Ecstasy that is
gaining in popularity, fearing it will lead to fatal overdoses
similar to ones experienced a few years ago caused by heroin mixed
with fentanyl.
Michigan and nine other states along Canada's border would see the
first wave of any such overdoses, and officials are warning that the
so-called "extreme Ecstasy," which is mixed with methamphetamines, is
becoming a problem.
"They (drug dealers) are remarketing and packaging it and trying to
glamorize it," said Scott Burns, deputy director of the White House
Office of National Drug Control Policy. "We just went through this
issue with fentanyl. We learned a lot of things from that. We have to
get on it early and get on it aggressively."
Lax views toward drug use in Canada, coupled with successes scored by
U.S. agents against European Ecstasy producers and smugglers, have
fueled the problem, Burns said.
Federal agents seized about 5.4 million dosage units of Ecstasy in
the 10 states near the Canadian border in 2006, up dramatically from
the 568,000 units seized in 2003, according to statistics from Burns' office.
About 55 percent of the units had methamphetamines in them, Burns said.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police officials do not dispute that their
country has seen an increase in Ecstasy production or smuggling. They
said 5.2 million units smuggled in from Canada were seized in the
United States in 2004, up from 1.1 million in 2004, according to data
collected with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, RCMP officials said.
RCMP officials could not say how much of what was seized had methamphetamines.
"Prior to the past few years, we were seeing drugs brought into
Canada," said RCMP Corporal Cathy McCrory. "We have taken the
unsavory title of exporter of this drug."
Richard Isaacson, special DEA agent and public information officer
for the Detroit field division, said it is too early to call extreme
Ecstasy a problem in Michigan. But he said there is no denying that
Ecstasy is coming into the country in droves through Canada.
"This is one of the major routes Ecstasy is making its way into the
U.S.," he said, noting the Detroit office handles Michigan, Ohio and
Kentucky. "It needs to be understood that Ecstasy on its own is a
dangerous, potentially fatal drug. People have died from ecstasy.
Mixing it with another hallucinogen you are going to exacerbate the damage."
Burns said federal drug officials now will warn medical facilities,
drug treatment sites and others to get the word out.
"This is a public health issue," Burns said.
Federal Officials Say 'Extreme Ecstasy' Is a Potent Drug Laced With
Methamphetamines.
Federal agents are targeting a turbo-charged form of Ecstasy that is
gaining in popularity, fearing it will lead to fatal overdoses
similar to ones experienced a few years ago caused by heroin mixed
with fentanyl.
Michigan and nine other states along Canada's border would see the
first wave of any such overdoses, and officials are warning that the
so-called "extreme Ecstasy," which is mixed with methamphetamines, is
becoming a problem.
"They (drug dealers) are remarketing and packaging it and trying to
glamorize it," said Scott Burns, deputy director of the White House
Office of National Drug Control Policy. "We just went through this
issue with fentanyl. We learned a lot of things from that. We have to
get on it early and get on it aggressively."
Lax views toward drug use in Canada, coupled with successes scored by
U.S. agents against European Ecstasy producers and smugglers, have
fueled the problem, Burns said.
Federal agents seized about 5.4 million dosage units of Ecstasy in
the 10 states near the Canadian border in 2006, up dramatically from
the 568,000 units seized in 2003, according to statistics from Burns' office.
About 55 percent of the units had methamphetamines in them, Burns said.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police officials do not dispute that their
country has seen an increase in Ecstasy production or smuggling. They
said 5.2 million units smuggled in from Canada were seized in the
United States in 2004, up from 1.1 million in 2004, according to data
collected with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, RCMP officials said.
RCMP officials could not say how much of what was seized had methamphetamines.
"Prior to the past few years, we were seeing drugs brought into
Canada," said RCMP Corporal Cathy McCrory. "We have taken the
unsavory title of exporter of this drug."
Richard Isaacson, special DEA agent and public information officer
for the Detroit field division, said it is too early to call extreme
Ecstasy a problem in Michigan. But he said there is no denying that
Ecstasy is coming into the country in droves through Canada.
"This is one of the major routes Ecstasy is making its way into the
U.S.," he said, noting the Detroit office handles Michigan, Ohio and
Kentucky. "It needs to be understood that Ecstasy on its own is a
dangerous, potentially fatal drug. People have died from ecstasy.
Mixing it with another hallucinogen you are going to exacerbate the damage."
Burns said federal drug officials now will warn medical facilities,
drug treatment sites and others to get the word out.
"This is a public health issue," Burns said.
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