Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2004 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Les MacPherson THREAT OF DATE-RAPE DRUG MAY BE EXAGGERATED It was at a Grade 8 graduation party that I first observed the effects of the date-rape drug scare. Not the drug itself, you understand, just the scare. I'd been enlisted as a chaperone. One of the first things I noticed was the way that the graduating girls were holding their soft drinks. When they weren't actually drinking, they always kept one hand flat, palm down, on top of the can. They were all doing it. It was as if they were trying to keep the fizz in. To see all of these girls holding their drinks in exactly the same, affected way was almost creepy. When I remarked on it to one of the chaperoning moms, she knew all about it, as moms usually do. The girls, she explained, were holding their drinks as they did in order to prevent some sexual predator from slipping in a date-rape drug. Obviously, they'd been warned. But how real was the risk, I wondered. Not very. If you lined up all of the males in the world in order of the likelihood of them slipping someone a date-rape drug, the boys in this particular Grade 8 class would be very near the back of the line. Besides, the place was crawling with parents and teachers. Someone was even keeping track of who went in and out of the bathrooms. There would be no date rape here. What, exactly, led to the warning, no one seemed to know. I'd never heard of anyone being slipped a date-rape drug in Saskatoon. Neither had anyone else. A search through published Saskatchewan court decisions revealed then, as now, no convictions in this jurisdiction, ever, for any crime involving a date-rape drug. That's not to say it never happens, only that no one has been caught. Ever. The issue of date-rape drugs has come up in Saskatchewan courts only twice, and not in the way you might expect. In one case last year, a Saskatoon woman charged with impaired driving claimed her impairment was not voluntary. Her story was that she had only three drinks and then blacked out after someone slipped her a date-rape drug. She therefore could not be held responsible for any subsequent drinking. The Court of Appeal didn't buy it. There was "not a shred of direct evidence" that the accused had ever been slipped anything, the court ruled. What the direct evidence did reveal was a blood-alcohol content approaching twice the legal limit. The accused was found guilty as charged. The date-rape drug came up again in a more recent case, this one ending in the conviction for sexual assault of a Buffalo Narrows man. This time, it was the victim who believed she might have been slipped a date-rape drug. As in the other case, however, there was no direct evidence of any such drug. Rather, the evidence suggested that the victim was more likely impaired by alcohol. What mattered more than the source of impairment, however, was the absence of consent. Of that, there was direct evidence. The accused pleaded guilty. Confirming allegations of date-rape drugging can be problematic. The most notorious of the so-called date-rape drugs, properly known as gamma-hydroxybutyrate, or GHB, is quickly metabolized. According to the experts, a dose sufficient to render a person helpless might be undetectable in a blood analysis done 24 hours later. But the stuff hasn't been detected before 24 hours, either, at least not in this jurisdiction. Evidence of date-rape drugging elsewhere is almost as rare; allegations slightly less so. Among the latter was a weekend news report out of Winnipeg. That's what got me thinking again about the date-rape drug. According to the Winnipeg Sun, three women were rushed to hospital during the city's big folk festival after eating cookies that "may" have been laced with the date-rape drug. The women reportedly felt groggy after someone gave them cookies, but they couldn't remember who. They recovered fully and made no complaint to police. None of the three were sexually assaulted and there were no other such incidents at the festival. It is on the basis of the women's symptoms, not any chemical analysis, that the date-rape drug GHB is suspected. So there's no real confirmation of anything, really, except three groggy women at a folk festival. For this, there are many explanations more likely than someone slipping them the date-rape drug. Any way you look at it, date rape appears not to have been a factor. Incidentally, or not, GHB is sometimes taken voluntarily, for the high. It's reportedly associated with raves and with actor Nick Nolte. When he was arrested for impaired driving in 2002, blood tests revealed the presence of GHB, of all things. To his credit, Nolte did not claim that anyone slipped him the drug. I raise all this not to diminish the seriousness or the prevalence of date rape. I only point out that the threat of being slipped a date-rape drug might not be as great as our daughters are led to believe. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin