Pubdate: Tue, 14 Mar 2006 Source: Greenwood Commonwealth (MS) Copyright: 2006 Greenwood Commonwealth Contact: http://www.gwcommonwealth.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1541 Author: Bob Darden, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) ECSTASY HAS APPEARED IN GREENWOOD Ecstasy Has Surfaced In Greenwood, Raising Concern By Authorities. Known as MDMA or 3-4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine, Ecstasy is a synthetic, psychoactive drug chemically similar to the stimulant methamphetamine and the hallucinogen mescaline. Sgt. Demetice Bedell of the narcotics division in the Greenwood Police Department warned those gathered at the monthly meeting of the Ward 4 Neighborhood Watch on Monday night. Merck Company first synthesized MDMA in 1912 and patented the drug two years later when researchers stumbled across it while researching drugs to stop external bleeding. During the 1950s, the U.S. government tested it as a truth serum as part of the chemical warfare efforts by the CIA and the Army. But the first recreational use was in the 1960s. It caught on during the 1980s in Texas and took the name Ecstasy. Bedell labeled Ecstasy as a relatively new drug designed "for a younger crowd instead of an older crowd. If we don't get a handle on it, certain things are going to happen. It will be devastating." Ecstacy looks like children's aspirin tablets and can come in many colors. Some of the pills have a recognizable logo on them, for example, something akin to the Playboy bunny or Mitsubishi and Ford trademarks, Bedell explained. The pills cost of between $20 and $25 each on the street, Bedell said. Generally, the pills are swallowed or the white crystalline powder may be snorted, injected or smoked. The National Institute for Health describes the first effects of Ecstasy as "very fast, within half an hour of consumption." The individual reaches a plateau after that that lasts for an hour and within two hours symptoms of intoxication, which result in a loss of inhibitions, are gone. The physical symptoms include an increased heart rate, and hyper nervousness and alertness similar to an amphetamine. For men the drug may have the same effects as Viagra, according to recent NIH studies. The drug is considered a party drug and is particularly fashionable with young men. "One, it gives them the same feeling as Viagra. It gives them the same potency as that," Bedell said. "Two, it's water soluble so they can crunch it up and put it into a girl's drink. What does that mean? It means we've got a serious problem on our hands." Within five minutes of ingesting ecstacy, a women gets the feeling that the man "is really turning her on, when actually it's the drug," he said. "She seems like she's having this good time with this perfect stranger," and people who are attending the party don't see anything unusual, Bedell said. "She's laughing out, she's giggling, she's having a good time. Later on, when she realizes what happened, it's too late," he said. Once the man takes her from the party the trouble is only beginning, Bedell said. "She'll wake up in the back seat of a car with no clothes on. She'll wake up in a hotel room with her clothes off in a corner, and she doesn't know how she got there," he said. The woman, who might have been raped, cannot describe anything that went on because ecstacy blocks out short-term memory, Bedell said. "She can't tell who it was. When she got there. All everybody is going to say, when we go back to the party for our interviews, is say, 'Hey, she left with the guy and was having a good time. How can she be raped? She left there with him,'" he said. A case like this has already occurred in Greenwood, Bedell said. Three hours after ingestion, Ecstacy leaves the system, so it's very difficult to trace - except through DNA analysis using a sample of the victim's hair. More than likely, the community might say the woman is lying. The problems with ecstacy will be covered in-depth at a Basic Narcotics for Parents Workshop, scheduled for noon at Turner Chapel African-Methodist-Episcopal Church, at 717 Walthall St. on March 25. The workshop, which has been put together with the assistance of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, is intended to inform adults of the drugs currently available on the street, Bedell said. For more information on the narcotics workshop, call Bedell at 453-3311. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom