Pubdate: Tue, 23 May 2000 Source: Vacaville Reporter (CA) Copyright: 2000 Vacaville Reporter Contact: http://www.thereporter.com/ Author: Julie Davidow - Staff Writer FAMILY SUFFERS AGONY OF ECSTASY By the time Vacaville paramedics found Shawn Spontini on the lawn, it was already too late. The 17-year-old's body temperature had soared to 106.2 degrees. He was unconscious and not breathing. Witnesses said he vomited and had a seizure before collapsing at a friend's Sunset Lane trailer house. It was a classic case of acute MDMA intoxication - Methylene-dioxy-methamphetamine is the chemical name for the designer drug Ecstasy - but for Solano County health officials, it was the first fatal overdose they had seen here. * * * Shawn's death on March 3, 2000, has left his family and friends reeling. The Shawn they knew was a fun-loving kid who played the role of counselor to his friends and enjoyed his car more than anything in the world. The white 1992 Camaro with red rally stripes was a gift from his grandmother. Shawn loved to drive fast, make the tires squeal and leave behind skid marks in the empty parking lot at Boston Market after he got off work at night. "When he got the car, it was like 'Now I got all this power,' " said his girlfriend Jamie Hurst, 21. "I think he liked the car more than he liked me." Despite some exasperating habits - such as his tendency to knock the balls off the pool table and to spin doughnuts in his Camaro - friends say Shawn's honesty and concern for other people endeared him to everyone he met. "He was a good guy," said Lisa Steltz, 17. "He would just sit there and listen to me forever." And then there was his smile. "He had that smile that lit up his whole face," said Jessica Pool, 17. "he was just like a little kid. You just couldn't stay mad at him." Friends say the smile is what they'll remember. His dad has other memories. Born three-and-a-half months premature, Shawn William Spontini II debuted at a slight 3 pounds, 4 ounces on May 2, 1982. "They gave him an 80 TO 20 chance of living," said his dad, who is also named Shawn. "They said he was one hell of a fighter." * * * Shawn's zest for life makes it all the more difficult for family and friends to comprehend his death. How could a drug they know so little about visit such tragedy on their family? "I had heard bits and pieces about it on TV," said Tari Essex, the teen's great aunt. "But I had no idea how dangerous it was." Ecstasy, a hybrid of the stimulant amphetamine and the hallucinogen mescaline, is said to induce feelings of well-being, self-acceptance and closeness to others. It also accelerates the heart and inhibits the body's temperature-regulating system, which can lead to dehydration and overheating. Shawn's family members attended a seminar on the drug last month, hoping to find some link between the teenager they knew and the mysterious drug that took his life. Vacaville police Det. Todd Dye's talk emphasized the sensation-enhancing effects of Ecstasy. He said all-night dance parties called raves - held mostly out of town - are the most popular places to use Ecstasy. He pointed to symbols, music and clothing associated with the drug. Butterflies, the letter E, pacifiers and listening to computer-generated music are among the signs that a teenager might be experimenting with Ecstasy, he said. But Shawn's dad didn't recognize his son in any of the indicators Dye discussed. "I didn't see any of those signs whatsoever," the elder Spontini said. "There was nothing like that in my house." Shawn favored sports team logos on his clothes and he didn't listen to electronic music. Instead, he asked his dad to help him collect photographs of teenage pop singer Britney Spears and drove his friends crazy by playing her songs over and over again. "This (Shawn's overdose) didn't happen at a rave," Essex said. "It happened at someone's house." * * * Shawn's death was the final chapter in a series of tragedies in his life. When he was 3, his mother moved to Minnesota. "She got married and kind of started a new life," said Essex. Since then, "It's just been me and him," said his dad, who manages a pizza parlor in Fairfield. In the year they were together, Hurst said Shawn's mother called only twice and didn't talk to him either time. There were no birthday cards and visits were sporadic, with years passing before they'd see each other, she said. "His mother was just kind of an absentee in his life ... whereas his grandmother was there," she said. Shawn called his grandmother, Patricia Kalil, "mom." Then, in January, Kalil, 58, was kicked in the head and killed by her horse. Shawn's dad found her unconscious on the Leisure Town Road property they shared. "He loved his grandmother," said Hurst. "They were like friends. She lived with them so that was a major loss to both of them." His family insists Shawn showed no signs of severe strain or sadness after Kalil's death. But a month later, his dad was in a major accident that left him hospitalized with several broken bones and head injuries after his car smashed into the back end of a big-rig on Interstate 80. Shawn offered to help pay the bills. "I'll make sure everything is taken care of," he told his dad, pledging to work overtime - whatever it took to keep their household afloat. "All of that was on his shoulders," Hurst said. * * * Shawn quit Will C. Wood High School last fall at the beginning of his senior year. "He would not get up for school," said Hurst, adding that Shawn planned to take a high school equivalency exam. "It was more of a necessity to work." Unemployed for several months, Shawn was scheduled to fill out paper for his new job as a pizza delivery person the day he died. "He had to go in at 10 a.m.," said Hurst, who found no one home when she went to pick Shawn up at the trailer that Friday morning. She said she dropped him off the night before around 10 p.m. to hang out with his friends, Kristopher Crannell and Jeremy Jennings in a Vacaville mobile home park. Cannell, 18 and Jennings, 19, were arrested after Shawn died in connection with being under the influence of a narcotic and possession of drug paraphernalia. They were later released. Crannell's mother, Jackie Ann Crannell, was also arrested and is facing trial on charges of child endangerment and maintaining a residence where illegal drugs were being used. "He normally hung out over there," said Hurst. "A lot of Shawn's friends would stop by the trailer." * * * Spontini's father was recovering at VacaValley Hospital when he received word of his son's death. "They brought him in to the emergency room," said Spontini. "I guess they couldn't revive him." Shawn and his dad had talked openly about drugs - but never about Ecstasy. "I could maybe see my son trying something," he said, but his son showed no signs of drug abuse. Hurst said that when she and Shawn first started dating a year ago, they talked about the drug. "We discussed it," she said. "I knew he had tried (Ecstasy) but I was very against drugs so he wouldn't discuss that too much with me. I talked to his friends and they'd tell me he did it and I just didn't know about it. It seems like there's a bunch of stuff he didn't tell me." One Vacaville teenager said she partied with Shawn a couple of times and he appeared enamored with Ecstasy. "He'd always be talking about how he does hella E," said the 18-year-old who asked not to be identified. "He really seemed like he was into the drug. He seemed like a nice kid. The drug just got the best of him." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk