Pubdate: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2000 The Boston Herald, Inc. Contact: One Herald Square, Boston, MA 02106-2096 Website: http://www.bostonherald.com/ Author: Dave Wedge COPS COMBAT RISE IN DESIGNER DRUGS Responding to a rash of designer drug overdoses in the past two months - - including three at one club in one night - Boston police have posted warning signs in all of the city's nightclubs and are questioning why some owners have hired private ambulances. "It's become an epidemic which we're very concerned about," Boston police spokeswoman Sgt. Detective Margot Hill said. "There is a potential for death here and before we see someone die, we want to make sure we've done as much as we can." According to Hill, at least five patrons of the Roxy on Tremont Street have overdosed on GHB, or "liquid G," in the past month. On Feb. 13, there were three reported "liquid G" overdoses at the trendy nightspot, including a waitress who passed out and was hospitalized after drinking a glass of water that was spiked with the recently banned drug. Last weekend, a 21-year-old Franklin woman blacked out at the club and was rushed to the hospital after her drink was "tabbed" with GHB. Overall, there have been 10 reported designer drug overdoses this year in Boston, all of which resulted from GHB, ecstasy or an ecstasy mimic drug called DXM. None were fatal. In an attempt to combat the growing problem, Boston police have hung bright yellow signs in all city nightclubs, urging patrons not to accept pills or liquids from strangers and warning that use can result in "seizures, coma or death." Police are also wary of some club owners who have hired private ambulance services "to whisk kids out the back door," instead of using the city's free 911 service. Doing so, Hill said, cuts down on emergency responses to their establishments and hides the amount of overdoses. "The clubs are saying they're cooperating with us, but then they're hiring their own ambulances," Hill said. "I see it as symptomatic of a larger problem they're not addressing." The Roxy uses a private, Dorchester-based company called EasCare, as did the Paradise, a Commonwealth Avenue club which closed its doors this week after a string of license violations. Last month, an undercover cop on duty at the Paradise filed a report after seeing an overdosing clubber wheeled out a back door into an ambulance without notifying an on-duty police officer. EasCare spokesman Ed Hennegan rebutted Hill's claims, sayingclubs hire the company because their EMTs are equally qualified but do the job three times cheaper than the city. "It's been a long-standing, problematic issue," Hennegan said. He also said EasCare EMTs work side by side with Boston police, making it impossible to under-report overdoses. "When someone hits the floor, Boston PD is right there, so how could they hide the numbers?" Hennegan said. An overdose produces heat stroke-like effects and dehydration that can be brought on by alcohol, which is why many club goers shun booze in favor of bottled water. Hill says police have also taken note that some clubs have hiked cover charges as high as $15 and are charging up to $7 for bottled water, apparently to make up for sagging bar receipts. GHB, recently banned under federal law, has resulted in at least 65 deaths nationwide in the past five years, including 18-year-old Kelly Ann Sullivan of Uxbridge who died in a Hyannis motel room last month after taking ecstasy and GHB with her boyfriend. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson