Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 Source: Athens Daily News (GA) Copyright: 2001 Athens Newspapers Inc. Address: PO Box 912, Athens, GA 30603 Fax: 706-208-2246 Feedback: http://www.onlineathens.com/feedback.shtml Website: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Forum: http://www.onlineathens.com/community/forums.shtml Author: Stephen Gurr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) 'DESIGNER DRUG' ECSTACY HIGH IN POPULARITY The so-called "designer drug" that may have contributed to the death of an 18-year-old Athens Tech student last weekend is nothing new in town, and rarely is it fatal. Chris Allen died early Saturday at St. Mary's Hospital after going into seizures at an Athens nightclub. Friends told police Allen ingested a lethal cocktail of speed, alcohol and Ecstacy, which he allegedly bought from another patron at Athens Music Factory, an East Clayton Street bar. Ecstacy, a synthetic drug which also goes by the name MDMA, has been around since the flower-power heyday of psychedelia, but its popularity has skyrocketed in recent years among the dance club youth culture. Made popular in "raves" -- late-night dances featuring driving techno music and swirling lights -- ecstacy use is on the rise, experts agree. "It seems to be increasing in popularity, especially among high school and college-age kids," said Carla Higdon, director of community relations for the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies. "It seems to be more readily available." Higdon's Sarasota, Fla., non-profit group advocates government research into the potentially therapeutic benefits and health risks of substances like MDMA and LSD. She said taken in pure form, Ecstasy is not lethal. But when black market producers dilute the drug with methamphetamine or dextromethorphan, users may experience dangerously high heart rates and core body temperatures. With MDMA, like its illicit, synthetic cousins, "There's a tremendous incentive for black market production, and the content is not regulated in any way," Higdon said. While local police have made a few Ecstacy busts, most notably during the rock band Widespread Panic's three-day stand at the Classic Center last April, MDMA isn't a top priority in drug enforcement operations. Athens-Clarke police say they have their hands full enough trying to keep the crack cocaine market under control. "(Ecstacy's) not our most problematic drug," said Sgt. Mike Hunsinger, commander of the Athens-Clarke Drug and Vice Unit. "You don't see that many people involved in Ecstacy and LSD committing other crimes to support their habit." With crack addicts, you do, so that's where most of the drug-fighting resources go, Hunsinger said. Also, it's difficult for undercover officers to infiltrate a youth-oriented drug culture, Hunsinger said. And Ecstacy is taken and sold in dimly lit clubs or at parties, not in back alleys or street corners. "A lot of traditional enforcement techniques are ineffective, especially in a closed-in arena," Hunsinger said. "It's a pretty tight clique." Hunsinger said police were investigating the reports that Allen bought Ecstacy at Athens Music Factory, and had developed leads on who sold it. The venue's management did not return messages seeking comment. Hunsinger said that Athens Music Factory wasn't the only downtown bar where Ecstacy sales have been reported. "In the past year, it's been on the upswing," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F