Pubdate: Sat, 02 Sep 2000 Source: Halifax Daily News (CN NS) Copyright: 2000 The Daily News. Contact: http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/ Author: Rachel Boomer RAVE DRUG OVERDOSE PROMPTS FAMILY SUIT Relatives of Edward James (Jaimie) Britten - who died of an ecstasy overdose at a rave last year - accuse event promoter Brian Bagnell of selling Britten the drug and are suing him for gross negligence. "Brian Bagnell was grossly negligent to Britten by providing him with the illegal drug ecstasy, a noxious substance which Bagnell knew or ought to have known was dangerous by its nature," contends the family's lawsuit, filed at Nova Scotia Supreme Court. Britten's fiance Helen Noonan; his young daughters Raya Noonan and Aurora Marche; and his mother and stepfather, Michelle and Mark Britten, are suing Bagnell and his co-organizers for the 23-year-old's untimely death. The family holds Bagnell, his company Power Source International, and business partners James Taylor and Derek Conrad responsible for Britten's death. The suit says they should have enforced drug laws at the rave, made sure there was enough security and had medical staff on-site. The suit also claims the organizers didn't react properly when they realized Britten was in trouble. Britten was one of 3,000 people who flocked to Bagnell's Temptation rave at Exhibition Park the night of Sept. 11, 1999. In the family's lawsuit, lawyer Kim Richardson alleges Britten bought ecstasy from Bagnell after he arrived at the rave. "Shortly thereafter, (Britten) was found incoherent and sweating profusely on the floor of the building ... Bagnell observed this and chose not to offer or provide any assistance or medical care," Richardson writes. "Emergency personnel were called and were unable to revive him." The suit claims an unspecified amount of punitive damages, special damages and expenses. Britten was declared dead at the QEII Health Sciences Centre at about 4 a.m. He was supposed to marry Noonan, who was pregnant with the couple's daughter, in November. Raya is now five months old; Aurora is two years old. After Britten's death, Bagnell and another man, Robert Bedford, were charged with trafficking in ecstasy. Bedford, 21, who sold Britten two of the four pills he took, pleaded guilty and received a one-year conditional sentence. Bagnell is scheduled to stand trial Sept. 18 at Bedford provincial court. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk