Pubdate: Sun, 24 Jun 2001 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2001 Contra Costa Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.contracostatimes.com/contact_us/letters.htm Website: http://www.contracostatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/96 Author: Fox Butterfield Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) AS ECSTASY USE SPREADS, DRUG DEALER VIOLENCE RISES The Club Drug Has Broken Ethnic Barriers; High School Students Report Increasing Exposure LOS ANGELES -- It was finding an Israeli drug dealer dead in a car trunk at Los Angeles International Airport 18 months ago that gave the authorities here the first hint that the club drug ecstasy was becoming a serious problem. He had been killed by two hit men sent from Israel, said officials of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Then there was the shipment of 2.1 million ecstasy pills, worth $40 million on the street, that the U.S. Customs Service seized at the airport last July. The pills, labeled clothing, arrived on an Air France flight from Paris, intended for another Israeli dealer here. The authorities say it was the world's largest ecstasy bust. And now law enforcement officials say they have seen another worrisome development this year. At a number of large all-night dance parties called raves, drawing thousands of young people to the desert east of Los Angeles, rival gangs have fought over the sale of ecstasy. At one rave at a fairgrounds at Lake Perris in March, 102 people were arrested on charges of selling ecstasy, assault or resisting arrest, according to the DEA. What is happening in Los Angeles mirrors what is occurring across much of the nation, law enforcement officials and drug experts say. Not only is the use of ecstasy exploding, more than doubling among 12th-graders in the past two years, but it is also spreading well beyond its origin as a party drug for affluent white suburban teen-agers to virtually every ethnic and class group, and from big cities like New York and Los Angeles to rural Vermont and South Dakota. At the same time, the huge profits to be made -- a tablet that costs 50 cents to manufacture in underground labs in the Netherlands can be sold for $25 in the United States -- have set off increasingly violent turf wars among dealers. "With drugs, it's always about the money," said Bridget Brennan, the special narcotics prosecutor for New York City. "And the dealers are starting to see there is so much money in ecstasy that more people are getting involved, and with that comes more violence." Homicides linked to ecstasy dealing have occurred in recent months in Norfolk, Va.; in Elgin, Ill., outside Chicago, and in Valley Stream, N.Y., outside New York City, police records show. This spring, in Bristow, Va., a suburb of Washington, a 21-year-old college student, Daniel Robert Petrole Jr., was shot 10 times in the head as he sat in his car outside a new townhouse he had recently bought. According to court records, the local police believed Petrole was responsible for distributing more than $1.5 million in ecstasy and marijuana in Prince William County. Two young dealers who worked with Petrole have since been arrested and charged with killing him. In New York City last month, Salvatore Gravano, the former Gambino crime family hit man, pleaded guilty to running a multimillion-dollar ecstasy ring in Arizona, where he was living under the federal witness protection program. Court documents showed that Gravano was accused of hatching four homicide plots to consolidate his control of the Arizona drug market, and that his organization was being supplied by Ilan Zarger, a drug dealer based in Brooklyn who had ties to the Israeli mob. Most ecstasy is produced in the Netherlands or Belgium and smuggled into the United States by Israeli or Russian organized gangs, either flown in as air cargo or carried on commercial flights by couriers, often dancers recruited from topless nightclubs, according to drug enforcement and Customs Service officials. Some Dominican groups have also become involved recently, using their own established routes, and they now sell ecstasy along with heroin and cocaine from drug houses in Washington Heights in Manhattan to buyers who arrive by car from as far away as Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia, the officials say. Because it is sold as pills, ecstasy is much easier to smuggle than heroin, cocaine or marijuana, the authorities say. Large imported shipments, originally flown into New York, Los Angeles or Miami, are then broken down and sent out by regular overnight delivery services, like Federal Express, to midlevel dealers in other cities. Brennan, the New York narcotics prosecutor, said ecstasy was also widely available on the Internet. Last year, her office arrested a man in Orlando, Fla., who had been selling ecstasy on a site called House of Beans to customers in New York. Seizures of ecstasy by the Customs Service have jumped sharply, to 9.3 million pills in 2000, up from only 400,000 pills in 1997, said Charles Winwood, the acting commissioner of the Customs Service. The law enforcement officials and drug experts do not suggest ecstasy will lead to the same levels of violence or social turmoil as crack cocaine did in the late 1980s, when thousands of teen-age dealers armed themselves with handguns and many mothers neglected their children. For one thing, ecstasy does not cause the same dangerous changes in mood and judgment as crack does. For another, crack gave only a brief high, driving addicts back to the street repeatedly in search of another dose and often leading them to rob or steal to support their habit. Ecstasy instead induces a high of up to six hours, enhancing feelings of empathy and closeness, its users say. But interviews with drug experts and with teen-age ecstasy addicts in treatment programs here show that the drug, known scientifically as MDMA, both a stimulant and a hallucinogen, can be disruptive and expose them to violence. "We are dancing with danger here, because the kids and their parents think of ecstasy as a benign party drug," said Michele Leonhart, the special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Los Angeles office. "They don't see what we see, that it's a neurotoxin with serious side effects, that people die from overdoses and that some of the dances in the desert are no longer just dances, they're like violent crack houses set to music." Dr. Alan I. Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, Md., said, "Contrary to what a lot of people think, that ecstasy is a harmless drug, we are learning more and more scientifically about its damaging effects." In the longer term, Leshner said, there is now evidence that repeated use of ecstasy can damage the brain cells that produce serotonin, the neurochemical that is critical for preventing depression and sleep disorders. People who have used ecstasy frequently experience memory loss and depression when the drug wears off, Leshner said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager