Pubdate: Wed, 26 Apr 2000 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2000 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: The People's Forum, P.O. Box 191, Raleigh, N.C. 27602 Fax: (919)829-4872 Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Author: Todd Nelson Note: Staff writer Todd Nelson can be reached at 829-8963 or BUSTS TARGET NEWER DRUGS Officials this week detail the eight-month crackdown on Ecstasy and other 'designer drugs.' Defendants face charges under a new state law. RALEIGH -- Police have seized more than $1 million in Ecstasy and other drugs and made arrests from downtown Raleigh to the West Coast in shutting down several groups suspected of supplying the city's growing market for designer drugs. Close to three dozen people, some working in groups and others individually, face charges from the eight-month investigation, which police made public Tuesday. Almost a third face trafficking charges under a new state law that took effect this year. Investigators began focusing on so-called designer drugs -- a negligible presence in the Triangle just a couple of years ago -- after they started turning up in increasing amounts across the city, Raleigh police Capt. Mike Longmire said. As the investigation continued, police worked with agents from the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation in making arrests and seizing drugs and the Wake County District Attorney's Office in bringing charges. The Raleigh crackdown comes as demand for Ecstasy has been surging nationally, with U.S. Customs agents seizing record amounts of the drug this year. Often associated with all-night dance parties known as raves, Ecstasy is in demand among relatively affluent, typically white teens, young adults and young professionals, authorities said. The growing use of Ecstasy has alarmed public health officials, who warn that the hallucinogenic can cause brain damage with long-term use and can kill even first-time users. In tracing suspected sources of drugs seized here to California and the Southwest, the local investigation may have played a role in one of the country's most prominent Ecstasy busts this year -- of former Mafia hitman Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, charged with running a large designer-drug operation in Arizona. Police have declined to comment on the possible connection. "The source of a portion of the Ecstasy distributed locally was from the West Coast area and was part of a significant organized criminal enterprise," Longmire said. So far, police have seized 15,000 doses of Ecstasy in pill, powder and liquid form, with a value of $535,000 on the street, where a tablet sells for up to $35. Other designer drugs seized include ketamine, known as Special K; GHB, known as a "date-rape" drug; and crystal methamphetamine. Police also have made a big haul of traditional drugs, including $500,000 of LSD, enough for about 100,000 hits, as well as cocaine, morphine, heroin and marijuana. Raleigh investigators and SBI agents this week seized a large amount of LSD in making several arrests in Western North Carolina, Longmire said. The crackdown, targeting large-scale suppliers instead of street-level dealers, has made at least a dent in the local supply of Ecstasy and other drugs, police said. "We believe in several cases that we identified those people responsible for the distribution of a significant amount of these drugs in our community," Longmire said. "We feel confident that we have had an effect on a portion of that activity." Arrests of out-of-state residents include a Las Vegas man facing a trafficking charge and a North Hollywood, Calif., man charged with conspiracy, reports state. Local arrests include a Broughton High School student charged with possessing and selling five tablets and a Wake Technical Community College student charged with trafficking 18,910 tablets. Other defendants include employees of several bars and restaurants, a couple of construction workers and a soldier from Fort Bragg. Police used several techniques to infiltrate the illegal trade, including having undercover officers buy drugs from suspects, Longmire said. As the months passed, investigators kept surveillance on suspected dealers, searched several houses and apartments, pursued tips from confidential informants and had arranged for monitored delivery of packages of drugs that had been intercepted. Possessing any amount of Ecstasy is a felony under state law. Since Jan. 1, those arrested with more than 100 tablets are charged with trafficking and face at least 35 months in prison. The General Assembly adopted a bill creating the offense last year. Sen. Fountain Odom said he sponsored it after several Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers expressed concerns. "They thought it was as bad as if not worse than some other [drugs] covered" under existing trafficking laws, Odom said. "They thought folks were beginning to use it because it was not covered." Raleigh's growing trade in Ecstasy has mirrored a trend that has seen the hallucinogenic turn up in record amounts across the country. U.S. Customs agents have seized 4 million tablets of Ecstasy this year, topping in four months the total of 3.5 million tablets seized in all of fiscal year 1999. Known as the "hug drug" because of the heightened feeling of euphoria users experience, Ecstasy tablets often are embossed with symbols such as smiley faces and corporate logos. But the drug can be deadly, said Dr. Wilkie Wilson, a professor and neuropharmacologist at Duke University and co-author of a book about the most commonly abused drugs. People who use too much Ecstasy in a hot place such as a crowded dance floor can suffer injuries to their brains and other organs if their body temperatures rise out of control, Wilson said. Repeated use can cause brain injuries that can leave users chronically depressed. Studies suggest that longtime users also suffer memory loss. "People repeatedly tell me, 'How can a drug that makes you feel so good be bad?' " Wilson said. "Many people believe it's not bad for you because of how peaceful and loving it makes them feel. They think it's the authorities that want to deny them their fun." Approaching the drug with caution, however, is not simply a matter of law-enforcement paranoia, Wilson said. Unlike alcohol or other drugs, Ecstasy use can be difficult to detect, with dilated pupils and extreme thirst from dehydration among the few indications. "Parents need to understand that it produces the thing kids need most, which is love and acceptance," Wilson said. "One answer is to offer your kids lots of love and acceptance. Another thing is to know where they are. This stuff is penetrating into every level of society because people like being loved." - --- MAP posted-by: Greg