Pubdate: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 Source: Reporter, The (Fond du Lac, WI) Copyright: 2004 Gannett Wisconsin Newspapers Contact: http://www.wisinfo.com/thereporter/contactus/readerservices/letter_to_editor.sht Website: http://www.wisinfo.com/thereporter/index.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2271 Author: Aubrey Fleischer, the reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) ACCUSED HAVE MINOR RECORDS Two former Fond du Lac area residents who were arrested in Las Vegas in July on charges of selling Ecstasy-like drugs and chemicals over the Internet have no prior local drug offenses, according to the Wisconsin Circuit Court Internet database. Michael J. Burton and Keith A. Russart, both 24, were arrested July 21 after DEA agents searched the Las Vegas home they shared. The search followed an indictment ordered by the Middle District of Louisiana U.S. District Court alleging that Burton sold a mixture of drug-like chemicals on his Web site that killed a Louisiana man. Burton is formerly of Fond du Lac, and Russart is formerly of Campbellsport. Burton was charged with four counts of using a Web site to distribute analogues of controlled substances in the Middle District of Louisiana. Russart was arrested on similar charges after the search of their home. Both made initial appearances before a magistrate in Las Vegas following their arrests, said U.S. District Attorney David Dugas of Baton Rouge. Burton is being held without bond, and Russart's bond was set at $20,000, Dugas said. Locally, both men have a relatively minor criminal history. Burton's criminal record in Wisconsin ranges from disorderly conduct to a number of traffic violations. He was booked into the Fond du Lac County Jail in August 1999 on a theft of movable property charge but was released three days later, said Fond du Lac Police Department Detective Phil Anderson. His last local offense was a traffic violation in May 2003. Russart's local record isn't as extensive as Burton's and doesn't contain any serious offenses, Anderson said. Russart's contains several traffic offenses and a theft charge, he said, but he was never booked into the Fond du Lac County Jail. Russart's last local offense was a traffic violation in March 2003. The investigation and Burton's indictment are part of a nationwide DEA initiative --"Operation Web Tryp" -- that targets Web sites distributing designer drug alternatives such as the chemicals that were being sold on Burton's Web site. The chemicals are disguised on such sites as being for research, but they are often purchased and consumed by young people because they can produce stimulant and hallucinatory effects similar to designer drugs like Ecstasy or LSD, according to a U.S. Attorney's office press release. Eight other people in Nevada, California, Arizona and Georgia were arrested as part of the DEA's operation, and Internet domain names and other assets associated with the businesses were seized. If convicted on count one of the indictment, which charges that a 22-year-old Louisiana man died as a result of using the chemicals he bought from Burton's Web site, Burton could face life in prison. He faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for each of the other three counts. The St. Francisville, La., man died after ingesting a substance he thought was similar to Ecstasy that he purchased on Burton's Web site, www.americanchemicalsupply.com. His body temperature reached 108 degrees before he died three days after ingesting the substance. Both Burton and Russart are in the process of being transferred to Louisiana for further court proceedings. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake