Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 Source: USA Today (US) Copyright: 2000 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc. Contact: 1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington VA 22229 Fax: (703) 247-3108 Website: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Authors: Donna Leinwand and Gary Fields, USA TODAY FEDS CRACK DOWN ON ECSTACY NORTH BERGEN, N.J. -- In a suburban ballroom, music without melody pounds from speakers piled almost to the ceiling. At this nine-hour rave party, only the ribcage-rattling bass matters. About 2,000 teenagers, most wearing nylon UFO brand parachute pants, writhe and hop on a packed dance floor. Alcohol is conspicuously absent, but the drug Ecstasy is everywhere. The aspirin-size pill provides the high of choice among these pencil-thin girls and hyperactive boys. They say it heightens their sensitivity to the vibrating bass, tickling the skin and sending chills up the spine. ''Everything feels good,'' says Tricia Kaz, 18, a freshman at Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J. She spent three weeks at a drug rehabilitation center after her mother found out about her Ecstasy habit, but she says she doesn't see the harm of a drug that produces no hangover or physical craving. Kaz and the other youths might be mistaken. New studies show that users of Ecstasy risk the possibility of brain damage from prolonged use. Law enforcement is intensifying its efforts to stop the growing demand for Ecstasy and to halt organized crime's penetration of the market. The pill, at $20 or so a pop, acts a little like stimulants such as methamphetamine and a little like a hallucinogen such as LSD. A hit produces a warm, fuzzy sense of well-being and the manic energy to dance until dawn. However, studies indicate that Ecstasy, the nickname for the drug compound 3,4 methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA), clicks off brain cells crucial to memory and sleep. ''The party's over,'' says Alex Stalcup, a physician who runs a drug treatment center in Concord, Calif. ''Ecstasy hurts the brain. It is no longer a hypothesis. The drug is toxic. It is no longer appropriate to consider it a recreational drug.'' Until recently, law enforcement had shrugged its shoulders. Because Ecstasy users keep to themselves at dance parties, known as raves, there was no violence or theft associated with drugs, as there is with drugs such as cocaine and heroin. The Ecstasy scene is becoming more dangerous as the lure of phenomenal profits attracts organized crime. The drug costs just pennies to make. The international crime agency Interpol, the U.S. Customs Service and the Drug Enforcement Administration have tracked Israeli crime groups and Russian mobsters trading in Ecstasy. Last month, federal authorities arrested Sammy ''The Bull'' Gravano, a former mafia hitman, for allegedly running an Ecstasy ring in Arizona that distributed 25,000 pills a week, worth half a million dollars on the street. Between Oct. 1, 1999, and Feb. 29, Customs agents confiscated 4 million tablets, 1 million more than in all of last year. Seizures of Ecstasy, classified as a Schedule I drug, like LSD and heroin, are expected to grow eightfold by the end of the year. ''It's truly a global business, and it has completely erased all the old routes law enforcement had mapped out for the smuggling of traditional drugs like heroin, cocaine and marijuana,'' says U.S. Customs Commissioner Raymond Kelly. Crime groups use computers to track international mail shipments of the drug from the Netherlands and Belgium through dummy addresses in Europe and into the United States. While his agency and others step up policing efforts, Kelly emphasizes that teenagers need to be warned about the drug's potential danger. ''It has the 'love-drug, hug-drug' label to it,'' Kelly says. ''Kids and their parents don't realize it has long-term implications. It is a killer, category one, dangerous drug.'' Inside the all-night rave Raves began in the 1980s as informal groups gathered on farms or in vacant buildings to listen to bass-heavy music, take Ecstasy and dance all night. Now, an Internet search will turn up more than two dozen raves in the USA on any weekend, many in legal venues that promise safety, portable potties and laser light shows. At the New Jersey party, a bouncer checked each ''raver'' for weapons and drugs, but the tiny pills slipped by easily. Ravers say they hide them in their shoes or take them beforehand. Marijuana passed security, too. Teens rolled joints openly and the odor of pot permeated the ''chill out'' room off the main dance floor, where the ravers cool off after dancing. The crowd was middle class, overwhelmingly white and unfailingly polite. Most were teenagers or in their early 20s. They had paid $20, $15 with a flier, to get in. Many said they don't take drugs but relish the atmosphere of acceptance at raves that they do not find among the cliques at school. ''Drugs are everywhere. They're in school,'' said Sunny Pae, 20, a history major at New York University. ''It's all about the music, the love, the vibe.'' Even those who shun the drugs admitted that an Ecstasy undercurrent defines the party, the music and even the fashion. The concession stand catered to Ecstasy users. The drug causes involuntary jaw clenching and teeth grinding, and nonstop dancing leads to dehydration. Ravers suck pacifiers to unclench their jaws and lollipops to lubricate their mouths. Two lollipops cost $1. A bottle of water or fruit juice costs $3. As the night wore on in North Bergen, teenagers huddled cross-legged in clumps, knees and shoulders touching or bodies intertwined like nesting hamsters. New acquaintances kissed for hours or massaged one another's shoulders. ''Everything is so much better when you're on drugs,'' said a 15-year-old high school freshman from Bayonne, N.J., who sucked madly on a pacifier strung around her neck. Her name is being withheld because of her age. In a midriff-baring tank top and nylon pants, this A-plus honor student danced wildly for hours, fueled by three Ecstasy pills. ''Raving is not a crime,'' she said. Possessing and taking Ecstasy are illegal, but the police rarely raid these well-publicized raves. In New Jersey, possession of Ecstasy carries a sentence of three to five years in prison, but a first-time offender could serve less than a year in county jail, says John Dangler, a Morris County, N.J., prosecutor, and ''that's if it is a truckload or a tablet.'' Police know that Ecstasy and a handful of other drugs saturate these parties. Raiding raves is an inefficient use of resources, police say. In March, police raided a Toronto rave attended by 12,000 people but confiscated just 300 Ecstasy tablets. ''Cops are still out there chasing major violent crimes like murder and rapes and serious drug dealers,'' says James Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police. ''What would a cop rather be doing, chasing a guy who just put a gun in a clerk's ear at the store or arresting a kid who is using a drug that doesn't promote violence?'' Police departments concentrate on street-corner drugs because of their link to violence and crime, says Trinka Porrata, a retired Los Angeles narcotics detective. Police, she says, are conflicted about raiding raves. ''If you bust up a party, then you're sending 800 kids on drugs on the road,'' Porrata says. ''At a real rave, they go there, they do their drugs, they pass out, they sleep it off and then they go home.'' Dangers of Ecstasy Yet the urgency to get the drugs out of reach of teenagers has intensified as new scientific studies warn that Ecstasy causes brain damage. Stalcup, the drug addiction doctor who describes himself as a ''prototypical aging hippie'' and has tried Ecstasy, often spends Saturday nights at San Francisco-area raves, where he treats overheated and dehydrated teenagers. He understands the allure. ''Ecstasy really is quite grand,'' Stalcup says. ''You feel warm and close to people. You want to hug people. You feel ecstatic and full of human kindness.'' Still, he worries. Scientists have studied images of the brain before and after Ecstasy. Stalcup describes the differences as ''graphic and gruesome.'' Ecstasy kills off part of the nerve in the brain that releases serotonin, the chemical that controls sleep, sexual function, memory, appetite and mood, says Wilkie Wilson, a neuropharmacologist at Duke University who co-wrote Buzzed, a guide to abused drugs. A study by Johns Hopkins University researcher George Ricaurte in Baltimore compared the brain scans of 14 Ecstasy users to non-users' scans and found nerve damage that persists for at least seven years. Teens have more serotonin-producers than they need, Wilson says, but some of those nerves are lost with aging. ''Ecstasy users probably don't realize this, but they are aging themselves prematurely,'' he says. ''I expect them to have clinical depression and sleep disorders down the road. It impairs learning, which is a particularly bad thing for teenagers.'' The National Institute for Drug Abuse has placed 350,000 postcards with warnings in racks at clubs and record stores and will spend $54 million on Ecstasy research this year -- 40% more than in 1999. ''We're not yet at epidemic proportions, but we are seeing an increase of Ecstasy and other club drugs in every major city and among high school kids,'' NIDA director Alan Leshner says. ''We're trying to use science to get in the way of a potential public health plague.'' A few skeptics say that public health officials are exaggerating the long-term risks of Ecstasy use or base their warnings on incomplete scientific research. So far, the naysayers lack counterevidence. But there are three U.S. studies under way to determine whether the drug has any legitimate therapeutic use. The studies also are measuring health risks. Chemists created MDMA, or Ecstasy, in 1912 as an appetite suppressant, but it never became popular. In the 1970s, psychiatrists tried MDMA to eliminate inhibitions in psychotherapy, and many doctors found its effectiveness limited. In 1986, the government classified it -- over the objections of some psychiatrists who supported its use in therapy -- as a Schedule One illicit drug with no medical benefit. A federal conviction for possession of 2,800 grams, about 940 tablets, would bring a maximum of five years in prison. About 90% of Ecstasy comes from northern Europe, primarily the Netherlands and Belgium, where labs can produce a pill for less than a dime, the DEA says. Israeli crime groups, which mark up the wholesale price to about $4 a tablet, dominate distribution, the agents say. Last year, Dutch and Israel authorities seized more than 1 million tablets and arrested 49 people in the Netherlands, Israel and elsewhere. The pills fit easily in suitcases and carry-on bags. One courier stuffed a Winnie-the-Pooh doll full of tablets and carried it onto an airplane. Another dealer filled his child's electronic toy with the drugs to pass the Customs Service inspectors. Traffickers take advantage of relaxed European Union borders, shipping their drugs from Paris or Berlin instead of the heavily scrutinized routes from Amsterdam or Brussels. Concerned with the rapid expansion of Ecstasy trade, Interpol, the international police organization based in France, created a department devoted to tracking Ecstasy. ''It's complicated because there is not just one group with one modus operandi,'' says Hezi Leder, police attache for the Israeli embassy in Washington. Israeli authorities participate frequently in stings with U.S. and European authorities. Customs trained 13 dogs last month to sniff out Ecstasy. The agency also has formed an Ecstasy task force that catalogues smuggling methods and coordinates searches. The DEA is hosting its first Ecstasy conference in July in Washington. More than 200 international, federal, state and local law enforcement officials are expected to attend. Even as law enforcement tightens its grip on the international Ecstasy trade, U.S. entrepreneurs have begun to produce a version of the drug. Using Ecstasy recipes that don't rely on regulated chemicals, amateur chemists concoct the drugs at secret labs. In March, Texas State Police Lt. Patrick O'Burke and his officers shut down an Ecstasy lab on an 80-acre ranch near San Antonio, where they found enough chemicals to produce 750,000 capsules with a street value of $15 million. ''This was big business,'' O'Burke said. ''This was an organized criminal effort, very, very large scale.'' Retired Los Angeles detective Porrata predicts the problems with Ecstasy will begin to draw in local enforcement. When some California teens coming from a rave died after driving over a cliff, public pressure built to crack down, she says. ''Since then, law enforcement has been going, 'Oh, my God.' The raves are everywhere now, and we're starting to see accidents and overdoses and kids dying from dehydration,'' she says. ''Local police and the public are just waking up to it.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Greg