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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN QU: Experts - Alcohol the Leading Date-Rape Drug
Title:CN QU: Experts - Alcohol the Leading Date-Rape Drug
Published On:2002-09-30
Source:Star, The (Malaysia)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 23:51:41
EXPERTS: ALCOHOL THE LEADING DATE-RAPE DRUG

MONTREAL -- Alcohol is by far the leading "date rape" drug with a cocktail
responsible for more sexual abuse of young women than a tiny vial of GHB,
the latest weapon in the date-raper's arsenal, experts here said.

At a world forum on drugs and addiction, experts stressed that alcohol is
the primary substance that facilitates sexual aggression, not gamma
hydrobutyrate (GHB), which men have been increasingly and surreptitiously
dropping into the drinks of women to lower sexual inhibitions.

"For several years, we have been trumpeting that GHB is a rapist drug,
while in fact only a tiny minority of abused women have fallen prey to it,"
said Carole Peclet, a chemist at Montreal's Forensic Laboratory and Legal
Medicine.

Studies in recent years in the United States, Canada, Britain and Australia
have all found that alcohol is found more often in rape victims than
marijuana, pharmaceuticals or cocaine, Peclet said.

The US study, conducted from 1996 to 2000, examined 3,300 sex attacks where
use of a chemical agent was suspected. Just 3% of the women who reported
rapes were discovered to have been under the influence of GHB.

Another study, done in Quebec between 1998 and 2001, found no evidence of
any rape case linked to involuntary ingestion of GHB.

That is not to say that the effects of the drug are not powerful and
perverse, conference participants stressed. Because of its highly
psychotropic, or mind-altering, qualities, they said, GHB removes
inhibitions, opening the floodgates of sexual desire and fantasy and can
result in short-term amnesia.

Would-be rapists who resort to spiking drinks with the drug are often
someone the victim already knows, with the deed done in the privacy of an
apartment rather than a bar.

Although not the principal "rape drug," GHB is widespread, with several
distribution networks having been broken up in the United States and Canada
in recent weeks.

The "success" of the drug is that it "produces more or less the same
effects of alcohol but is less easily identifiable" in the behaviour and
appearance of the subject, said Sylvie Beauregard of the Montreal police
department.

GHB, ingested in large quantities, can be found in the bloodstream up to 72
hours later. It is replacing Ecstasy as the recreational drug of choice
among teenagers and young adults who believe its effects are similar but
less harmful.

At parties and after-hour watering holes, GHB is becoming known as "liquid
Ecstasy."

However, there's a grim downside, said Jean-Sebastien Fallu, president of
Montrea's Psycho-social Intervention and Research group; GHB mixed with
alcohol can cause death by respiratory failure.
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