Pubdate: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 Source: Daily Herald-Tribune (CN AB) Copyright: 2002 Daily Herald -Tribune Contact: http://www.dailyheraldtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1840 ECSTASY RUMOURED IN RED DEER OD DEATH RED DEER (CP) - The fatal overdose of a popular Red Deer nightclub deejay who made everyone laugh is convincing people to stop taking drugs, said his friends. Greg Walls's death is a wake-up call to people across Red Deer who knew him as a true friend, said Jason Podovinnikoff. ''If you needed him and you were two million miles away, he would have been there,'' said Podovinnikoff, 25, who befriended Walls a year ago. ''He was a 100-per-cent stand up friend. When he was in a room, everyone would laugh.'' Walls, 25, died Sunday after taking drugs at a party at the Wedgewood Gardens apartment complex. Walls, a Toronto native, moved to Red Deer a few years ago to work in the oilpatch. He became injured and lived on disability while working occasionally as a deejay for the downtown dance club Euphoria. Walls died shortly after arriving at Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre. Two friends were hospitalized. A 27-year-old friend was flown to a Calgary hospital where he remains in stable condition. Walls' girlfriend, in her early 20s, was driven to the hospital by friends. She was later transferred to Alberta Hospital Ponoka. RCMP won't confirm reports that the popular party drug ecstasy was taken. They are awaiting toxicology reports on Walls's body to determine the exact cause of death. Const. Ralph Cervi said the powdery-like drugs found in the apartment did not look like ecstasy to the officers. Some drugs sold as ecstasy contain potentially lethal cocktails of other drugs. In September 2000, police conducted a laboratory analysis of 13 ecstasy pills seized in Red Deer. Only five were pure ecstasy. The other pills contained drugs including PCP, known as angel dust. Ecstasy pills have also been laced with LSD, ketamine and even strychnine, or rat poison. In February 2001, two teenagers nearly died in Red Deer when they took ketamine, known on the street as Special K or Vitamin K. The youths, aged 17 and 18, were comatose when found by police. Ketamine, one of the exotic drugs making the bar scene in Red Deer, is used by veterinarians as an anesthetic. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart