Pubdate: Wed, 1 Mar 2000
Source: Richmond Review (CN BC)
Copyright: 2000 Richmond Public Library
Contact:   Unit 140 5671 No. 3 Road, Richmond, B.C.
Fax: (604) 606-8752
Website: http://www.rpl.richmond.bc.ca/community/RichmondReview/
Author:  Martin van den Hemel
Bookmarks: For ecstasy items http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm
For: rave items http://www.mapinc.org/raves.htm

THE DUTCH CONNECTION

Police Hoping To Stem Tide Of Rave Drug From Holland

The aspirin-sized white pills look innocent enough.

With symbols like a Teletubby character, unicorn, dove, dwarf or 
thunderbolt stamped on them, they might even be confused with something 
harmless like candy.

But the hallucinogenic drug known as Ecstasy can be deadly. Yet it still 
inspires a carefree attitude among many teenagers, who frequently pop the 
tablets into their mouth without a second thought during the all-night 
parties known as raves.

Liana Wright, the deputy regional coroner for the New Westminster region, 
told The Review Wednesday that an Abbotsford man in his early 20s died last 
year after attending a New Westminster rave where he had apparently 
consumed the drug Ecstasy. Toxicological tests revealed the drug-known by 
its scientific name as MDMA or methylene dioxy-methyl amphetamine-was in 
the victim's system, in addition to methamphetamines. It's the only death 
last year in the region that she recalls that was linked to Ecstasy.

The Review has also learned that a number of recent seizures and arrests by 
police have a link. Much of the drug circulating throughout the Lower 
Mainland is apparently made in Holland.

More than 100,000 pills seized by Canada Customs in November are believed 
to have been manufactured in Holland, known for its liberal attitude 
towards soft drugs such as marijuana.

These tablets were found inside the suitcases belonging to Yousi Sader and 
Rafael Tevet, who appeared in Richmond provincial court this week on 
charges of importing the drug Ecstasy.

While Sader, a 25-year-old resident of Israel, pleaded guilty to the 
importation charge and will be sentenced on April 3, Tevet is currently on 
trial in Richmond provincial court after pleading not guilty. The pair flew 
into Vancouver on a flight from Madrid through Amsterdam.

Two other recent cases involving the drug also have links to Holland:

* Michael Currie Russell, 54, and pharmacist Brooks Farrell Grenfal, 67, 
were sentenced to four years, and two years-less-a-day, respectively, for 
conspiring to traffic the drug Ecstasy in Richmond and other parts of the 
Lower Mainland.

During a lengthy RCMP investigation involving wiretapping of telephones, 
the pair were overheard planning to import the drug from Europe, in 
particular Belgium and Holland. Police seized 5,000 pills in the case.

* Bernard Jacobs, a 63-year-old from the Netherlands, was sentenced to 
three years in jail by Richmond provincial court judge Joel Groberman after 
being caught trying to smuggle nearly 10,000 pills into Vancouver through 
the international airport on Dec. 8.

Cognizant of the fact that there is a problem in Europe, many members of 
the European Union have set up separate policing agencies aimed at shutting 
down Ecstasy labs.

Jsrg Mslling, of the 220-person European police intelligence agency known 
as Europol, told The Review early Thursday morning that shutting down the 
manufacture of synthetic drugs such as Ecstasy is receiving top priority.

"There is a problem in Europe in the manufacture of designer drugs. It is 
regarded as a serious problem. It is a priority."

An investigator in the synthetic drug division, Mslling said that there 
were dozens of deaths in Europe attributed to the drug Ecstasy last year. 
He said other fatalities may have gone unreported and he noted that 
statistics were not kept by some countries.

Mslling said it will take a combined police crackdown and public awareness 
effort to reduce the level of manufacture and use of the drug.

He said rave-goers have no idea what they are ingesting when they take the 
drug.

Produced by organized crime syndicates in Europe, the drug often contains 
other chemicals such as methamphetamines, which can be deadly. Just two 
weeks ago, Dutch police seized a large quantity of the drug laced with the 
rat poison strychnine.

"You never know what is in the pill," he said from his office in The Hague. 
Even if the motifs on the pills are the same, the mix of ingredients can be 
different and deadly.

The pills circulating throughout Europe are manufactured in the same places 
as the drug being smuggled into Canada, he said.

Ecstasy has become a socially accepted drug in Europe, Mslling said, in 
large part because of its clean form of consumption: getting a high doesn't 
require snorting or a messy syringe.

When adults look for a headache remedy, they simply pop a Tylenol. Mslling 
said the same mindset has evolved with youth hoping to reach a euphoric, 
surreal high.

Scientific research links the synthetic drug with Parkinson's disease and 
brain damage. German forensic scientists now believe that it is possible to 
overdose on the drug.

Large scale production sites dot the European landscape, with some labs 
able to produce a million pills a day at a cost of just a few pennies each.

That means there's plenty of profit at stake for criminal syndicates.

"At the end of the day, that's what it's all about."

Serious large-scale production of the drug began in the middle to late 
'80s, and has been growing ever since, Mslling said.

The tablets are scored down the middle because after an initial dose of one 
pill, users often ingest another half pill to maintain a high that begins 
to wane after between four and eight hours.

The drug is both a stimulant and hallucinogenic, causing the heart to race 
and rapid breathing.

Ecstasy manufacturers stamp the tablets with a symbol to give users an 
indication of relative purity. But with the widespread proliferation of 
drug labs, Mslling said counterfeit tablets are commonplace.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake