Pubdate: Sat, 09 Aug 2003 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2003, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: Monica Scandlen of the Tribune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Note: Limit LTEs to 150 words CHARGES NOT FILED IN TEENS' OVERDOSE HUDSON - A mother jailed since Sunday won't face child neglect charges in connection with a prescription drug overdose that sent four teens to hospitals. Assistant State Attorney Mike Halkitis said the case didn't rise to the level of criminal neglect. He said, however, a Pasco County sheriff's deputy had probable cause to arrest Kathleen McMenemy. ``After the detectives did a full and thorough investigation, there was no evidence of legal neglect on her part,'' Halkitis said Friday. ``She almost immediately called 911.'' McMenemy, 41, remained in the Land O' Lakes Jail on Friday, held with bail set at $10,500, on unrelated charges. She declined an interview request through the sheriff's office. McMenemy's mother, Margarida Warnitz, said the prosecutor's decision confirmed what she believed all along: McMenemy did nothing wrong last weekend after she found the teens, including her 13-year-old daughter, unconscious in her mobile home during a sleepover. The three girls - another 13-year-old and a 14-year-old - and a 17-year-old boy were hooked to respirators to aid their breathing before being released from hospitals this week. Halkitis said the teens took four prescription medications belonging to McMenemy's roommate: the anti-inflammatory drug Vioxx, antianxiety drugs Xanax and Ativan and the antipsychotic drug Risperdal. ``They just took pills, a combination of those pills, and just started popping them,'' he said. ``Mom, in her bedroom, doesn't know what's going on.'' Paul Doering, a pharmacy professor at the University of Florida and co-director of the Drug Information Center, said it is increasingly common to see middle school students abusing prescription drugs. ``The trend is, if it's round, if it comes in a pill bottle, even if it's square, it's fair game,'' Doering said. ``They're playing Russian roulette every time they open up prescription vials.'' A new phenomenon called ``pharming'' is becoming popular, Doering said. Teens bring a variety of pills to a party, for example, throw them into a bowl, then grab and ingest whatever they can. ``The key thing is that young people throw caution to the wind and have no idea what these drugs are going to do,'' Doering said. ``You can only roll the dice so many times.'' Warnitz said her daughter is ``heartbroken'' and ``wants to be with her daughter.'' The 13-year-old lives nearby with her father, who has custody. Warnitz also said she hoped the legal decision would clear her daughter's name. ``Even though we know in our hearts she wouldn't do that, her picture was all over the news for days,'' Warnitz said. ``What do you do to erase the memory from people's brains?'' - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin