Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Francisco Chronicle Page: A1 - Front Page Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Author: Mark Martin, Chronicle Staff Writer Cited: DanceSafe: http://www.dancesafe.org/ Bookmark: MAP's link to Ecstasy items: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm THE ECSTASY AND THE AGONY Group Tries To Reduce Risk By Testing Pills Before popping the pill, the 16- year-old in bell-bottoms and a black T-shirt wanted to know what was in it. Brooke Owyang used an X-Acto knife to chip away at the white aspirin-size tablet the teenager's dealer had called ``X-Files.'' On a glass plate, she mixed a drop of clear liquid from an eyedropper with the pill's dust. The chemical reaction was immediate, allowing for a quick verdict. Ecstasy. Shouting above the techno beat at a recent daytime rave in Golden Gate Park, Owyang, a 19-year-old University of California at Berkeley student, delivered a brief lecture on the dangers of drugs, then watched the teenager stick the pill back in his pocket and disappear into the bobbing sea of humanity. Five minutes later, the teenager downed the pill. This is hardly the war on drugs that Nancy Reagan envisioned. But members of DanceSafe, a nationwide group born last year in a Berkeley apartment, say they are educating their mostly teenage and twentysomething audience about drugs and their dangers in a more effective style than the antidrug rhetoric preached in schools and commercials. Armed with information on drugs such as LSD, methamphetamines and GHB, DanceSafe volunteers set up tables at raves and dance parties, answer questions and test Ecstasy pills to ensure they are not poison. The group, largely funded by dot-com entrepreneurs, has chapters in nine cities and is growing during a time when Ecstasy is more popular than ever -- and fake Ecstasy is killing teenagers. Most law enforcement and public health officials do not object to the group's efforts to distribute information on drugs. But the pill testing is hard for some to swallow. ``They're helping people do something illegal,'' said San Francisco Police Inspector John Keane, a narcotics officer who said he was familiar with the group. ``I don't want to see anyone die from something they took without knowing what it was, but they are facilitating drug use.'' DanceSafe's founder, Emanuel Sferios, a 30-year-old graduate student and former social worker, insists the group does not promote drugs. ``The fact is people use drugs despite all our best efforts as a society to prevent it,'' Sferios said. ``Whether we want to continue with `Just Say No' campaigns or not is besides the point. People need information, and they're not getting it anywhere else.'' It is a debate that echoes some of the same issues raised more than a decade ago when San Francisco residents began passing out clean needles to heroin addicts to help prevent the spread of AIDS. DanceSafe members blend into the rave scene like hip chemists. At a Santa Rosa nightclub a week after the Golden Gate Park party, Owyang told three rapt women about how Ecstasy works -- by causing the brain to release abnormally high amounts of the chemical serotonin -- while shaking her head to the techno beat. On the dance floor, tiny, stuffed teddy bears hung from the ceiling as an animated Alice in Wonderland movie was projected on a wall. Women in ponytails hopped to a bass beat that shook the dance floor; men waved glow sticks like batons. DanceSafe was started last year in Sferios' apartment with $3,000 of his own money. The group now has a downtown Oakland office, a half- million dollar a year budget and four full-time employees. They also have an attorney, but they say that so far no member of DanceSafe in any city has been arrested. Sferios gets financial backing mostly from Bay Area dot-com entrepreneurs, who are more apt to socialize and network at dance clubs than Chamber of Commerce luncheons. Bob Wallace, a Sebastopol resident who was the ninth employee of Microsoft, has contributed to DanceSafe. So has Steve Simitzis, one of the founders of Critical Path Inc., a $4 billion company based in San Francisco. Using a chemical called Marquis reagent, which changes color in the presence of certain drugs, DanceSafe volunteers can usually tell what is in a pill sold as Ecstasy. They sell do-it-at-home pill-testing kits as well. The group passes out cards -- partially paid for by the San Francisco Department of Public Health -- that explain how certain drugs work. Included on the cards are chemistry lessons (``Ecstasy is MDMA, or 3,4- Methylene-dioxy-methamphetamine''), practical advice (when someone's having a bad LSD trip: ``Take the person to quiet surroundings where they feel comfortable''), and reality checks (``Speed is illegal. Possession can result in long prison terms''). The group's Web site, dancesafe.org, displays photos of Ecstasy pills circulating throughout the country, tells what they are called, and describes what is in them. A pill called ``Y2K'' is mostly caffeine, according to the site. It also reports that ``Mitsubishi,'' which circulated in Chicago last month, may contain a super-powerful stimulant called paramethoxyamphetamine, or PMA, which killed three Chicago-area teenagers. DanceSafe's growth -- groups in 20 more cities are organizing -- comes at a critical time, Sferios said. Ecstasy, a psychedelic amphetamine, has advanced from small dimly lit dance clubs in big cities to all-night affairs in the suburbs, attracting tens of thousands of teenagers and young adults, officials say. ``It's exploding,'' said Trinka Porrata, a former Los Angeles Police Department official who works as a consultant on drug issues for police departments. Porrata said American law enforcement agencies are seizing at least a million Ecstasy tablets a month. A University of Michigan study last year found that 8 percent of high school seniors had tried Ecstasy, compared with about 5 percent the year before. As Ecstasy's popularity rises, dealers are flocking to sell a drug that costs $2 to $3 per pill to make but sells for $20 to $25. They are also manufacturing pills that cause sickness, or even death. In Oakland last year, eight people went from a rave to the hospital after ingesting Ecstasy that contained Dextromethorphan, or DXM, a chemical found in cough syrup which can inhibit sweating when taken in high doses. The pills taken at the hot, all-night dance party sickened users. And in Chicago, three teenagers died within a month of each other this summer from pills laced with PMA, which increases the heart rate to dangerous levels and can push the body's temperature so high that organs begin shutting down. Owyang said the Bay Area DanceSafe chapter has found at least one fake pill at every event it has staffed. Because many who use Ecstasy have little experience buying or using drugs --``It's a mall drug, not a street drug,'' says the consultant Porrata - -- the chance of someone ingesting something truly poisonous is a fact that must be faced, DanceSafe supporters say. ``People will buy whatever from anyone in here and then just take it without even thinking,'' said a 21- year-old at a Santa Rosa nightclub. The college student, who did not want to give his name, bought an Ecstasy pill-testing kit. The student said he began testing pills for purity after a friend had a bad experience with a DMX-laced pill. ``She told me she thought she was going to die,'' he said. ``That's kind of a scary thing to hear someone say.'' Others are not so sure DanceSafe's pill-testing is the right approach to take for an illegal drug that can cause depression and neurotoxic damage. A DARE America official called the group ``irresponsible.'' ``We're for zero tolerance, and they seem to be tolerating drugs,`` said Frank Begueros, deputy director of the program run by police departments in about 75 percent of American schools. And a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration official said DanceSafe is misleading young Americans. ``There is so much misinformation about Ecstasy -- mainly that it really can't hurt you,'' said Jocelyn Barnes, spokeswoman for the DEA's San Francisco office. ``So when you have an organization talking about Ecstasy and they've got the word `safe' in their name, I'm not sure that's a good message. This stuff is lethal.'' Jennifer Cutler, 29, a San Francisco resident who was strolling through Golden Gate Park when she happened upon the rave event and DanceSafe's setup, echoed Barnes. ``I'm not comfortable with these people essentially sending the message to teens that drug use can be safe,'' Cutler said. ``They are saying some drugs are OK. I think it's promoting drugs more than educating.'' But Sferios says DanceSafe is hardly a cheerleader for drug use. ``We have never caused anyone to take a pill,'' he said. ``But we have caused hundreds of people not to take a pill that was dangerous. I think we could argue we're decreasing the amount of people who take Ecstasy.'' While DanceSafe also distributes condoms, ear plugs and fruit -- usually their most popular attraction -- at raves and clubs, pill-testing and drug education are the group's core purpose. They recently gained a new proponent. Janice Aeschlimann's 18-year-old daughter Sara was one of the three suburban Chicago teenagers killed by fake Ecstasy last month. Aeschlimann said she had never heard of Ecstasy until a month before her daughter died. Now, she is an unfortunate expert. She supports DanceSafe, she said, because parents cannot afford not to. ``When I first heard about what they were doing, I thought it was a terrible idea,'' said Aeschlimann from her Naperville, Ill., home. ``But now I'm not so sure. I guess if kids are going to be doing this stuff, we should have a group like that. You have to be realistic. ``Had my daughter had some of this information, I think she would have been smart enough to at least have it tested.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake