Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 Source: Cape Cod Times (MA) Copyright: 2001 Cape Cod Times Contact: 319 Main St., Hyannis, MA 02601 Fax: (508) 771-3292 Feedback: http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/edits/letters.htm Website: http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/ Author: Noelle Barton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) POLICE OPEN EYES TO 'LOVE HUG' DRUG Kids And Their Parents Get A Quick Lesson On The Hottest Teen Narcotics. MARSTONS MILLS - The last thing Jerry Britt expects to get from a person he has under arrest is a request for a hug. But that's what he's gotten from a person "rolling" under the influence of the "love hug" drug, Ecstasy. The amphetamine, which heightens tactile senses, was the topic of a seminar at Barnstable Middle School last night attended by about 50 parents and kids. Britt, a Yarmouth police officer, joined Barnstable detective Mark Delaney in telling the audience that information on Ecstasy and other designer drugs will empower kids and make them able to resist peer pressure to take the drugs. "Ecstasy is now the drug of choice over marijuana and alcohol," Delaney said. "We're finding out that the kids making these decisions are not fully aware of the health issues involved. In order to combat, we have to understand." Designer drugs such as Ecstasy, GHB, GBL and ketamine have been found on Cape Cod and are available to kids, Delaney said. Last February, an 18-year-old Uxbridge woman died of an overdose of a combination of those drugs and alcohol in a Hyannis motel. Delaney and Britt highlighted the history of the drugs and described symptoms of people on the drugs so parents could be more aware. First developed in Germany in the early 1900s, Ecstasy was used as an appetite suppressant. It was given to soldiers fighting in the trenches of World War I because it suppressed appetite, thirst and sleep desires. Today there is no medical use for it. It is manufactured mostly in Western Europe into pills that resemble the Altoids breath mints, Delaney said. In the United States the pills sell for $20 to $30 apiece. Ecstasy is known as a party drug that produces an extended high. It is popular at techno dance parties or "raves," Delaney said. "We've had them right here in Barnstable," he said. "These predators go there to sell their wares." When taken, the drug produces a high within an hour and that high, called "rolling," will continue for three to five hours. The drug stimulates the release of dopamine and seratonin in the brain. After that time, the person who has taken the drug will become depressed. Often, people will seek out other designer drugs such as ketamine to boost their system back to what it was on Ecstasy. Britt warned the audience of a Web site, www.dancesafe.org, devoted to convincing kids that Ecstasy and other designer drugs are safe to use in certain contexts. Barnstable Middle School principal Edie LaBran has banned certain items from the school that are associated with drug use - particularly Altoid containers and baby pacifiers, which are used by Ecstasy users to chew on when they are rolling, said LaBran, who has a son in Barnstable High School. She first heard of Ecstasy at a similar seminar at the high school last fall, LaBran said. "It gave me huge food for conversation with my son," she said. "It heightened my awareness." Ed Yargeau and Nancy Brunswick, both teachers in the Barnstable school system, brought their kids to the seminar last night. "It concerns us a lot," Brunswick said. "We want to make sure our kids are equipped." Her son, fifth-grader Steven Kilmurray, said he learned that if drugs are in Gatorade when you shake it, the liquid will foam up. "People try to mistake drugs for candy," he added. Yargeau said he was impressed with the good information at the seminar. "You can't have too much information when it comes to this," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager