Pubdate: Mon, 30 Apr 2001 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2001 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Website: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Author: Bob Graham , Florida's senior U.S. senator Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) TUESDAY, A NEW TOOL TO COMBAT ECSTASY EPIDEMIC When Michelle C. was 15 years old, she discovered something that made her feel great for a few hours. When she took Ecstasy, Michelle had no inhibitions. She was never scared or embarrassed to do anything. She had none of the uneasy moments that usually punctuate adolescence. She also, it turned out, had no control. She wanted to feel that way all the time. She began to steal from her parents and cut classes to get high. More than a year and a half later, Michelle is in recovery. She is learning about self-respect and about how to feel good about herself without taking drugs. Michelle is lucky. She got help. But many young people don't. They hurt themselves, their families and, eventually, their futures. Too often, they end their futures. Beginning Tuesday, those young people may have one more law in place to protect them. Starting on that date, drug smugglers banking on the Ecstasy of easy money will risk the agony of long-term incarceration. In March, the United States Sentencing Commission enhanced penalties for crimes involving Ecstasy and other club drugs. This long-overdue move was mandated by last year's Ecstasy Anti-Proliferation Act, which I introduced after learning about the deaths of several young Floridians who had taken the drug. This was a crucial move against what has become a deadly epidemic across the country. But the battle literally for the hearts and minds of America's young people is far from over. The most intransigent enemy is the persistent myth that Ecstasy is safe. Ecstasy abuse has skyrocketed since it was added to the list of Schedule I controlled substances in 1985. Use has doubled since 1995, according to a survey by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. Ecstasy seizures by U.S. Customs officials have increased 430 percent since 1997. Research has linked Ecstasy to brain damage and depression, heart attack and stroke. Until now, federal sentencing guidelines for Ecstasy were hopelessly outdated. As a result, Ecstasy has been a very valuable commodity for smugglers. Production costs and the risk of long-term incarceration were low, while retail prices are high. Every drug is compared to marijuana. Under the old sentencing guidelines one gram of Ecstasy was equivalent to only 35 grams of marijuana; while, one gram of methamphetamine was equivalent to two kilograms of marijuana. A recent Customs Service operation seized nearly 650,000 Ecstasy tablets with an estimated street value of $19.5 million. The new, tougher sentencing guidelines, which go into effect on Tuesday, nearly triple penalties for Ecstasy-related crimes. The new guidelines are aimed at punishing profiteers, not young people who make a bad choice. Overall, the new guidelines boost the average penalty for Ecstasy trafficking from 25 months to 60 months. In the past, possession of 800 Ecstasy pills carried an 18-month sentence. The new guidelines increase that to five years. The Sentencing Commission did an exemplary job crafting a punishment to fit the crime. The second part of the battle is to reach those people, many of them young teenagers, and get them the information they need to make healthy choices about what they put into their bodies. Last year, we took a major step. The Ecstasy Anti-Proliferation Act authorized $10 million for grants and programs to educate Americans about the dangers of Ecstasy use. This year our challenge is ensuring that money is actually appropriated and gets to the agencies and organizations that are best equipped to reach those at risk for Ecstasy use. This won't be easy. It will take coordination between parents and law enforcement. It will take hard work, and it will take constant vigilance to make the reality of drug use as pervasive as the myth. Young people are learning about Ecstasy from a highly influential group -- their peers. At a recent hearing on the Ecstasy epidemic, members of the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control heard from several young people who are in recovery after sliding into dependence on Ecstasy. They learned about the drug from friends, who told them it would make them feel good. No one told them it could kill. The Internet is rife with chat rooms in which teens swap glowing stories about their Ecstasy experiences and assure each other it's perfectly safe. We can't stop young people from communicating with each other, nor do we want to. But we can add several pounds of truth to what they know about Ecstasy. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk