Pubdate: Tue, 21 Mar 2006 Source: 40-Mile County Commentator, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 The 40-Mile County Commentator Contact: http://www.mysouthernalberta.com/bicomm/home/index.php Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2541 Author: Delynda Pilon LEARNING THE DANGERS OF STREET DRUGS Someone will force you to make a decision about drug use sometime in your life. That was one of the messages Detective Steve Walton brought to the junior high students gathered in the gym at Senator Gershaw School last Monday. Walton spoke to kids from Grade 4 through to Grade 12 Monday in three separate presentations, then spoke to parents Monday evening and Foremost residents Wednesday evening. However, he said his message was mostly aimed at kids in the junior high level. "You have been identified by social scientists as the most vulnerable group, so I want to give you strategies to deal with drug issues," Walton commented. "I see my job very clearly as a drug educator." "As adults we have to arm you with drug information," he added. He said he was always concerned about kids getting information about drugs from drug traffickers. "They are giving information from a purely selfish point of view," he said. Walton, who described himself as an expert on street drugs, told the youth a bit about his career as a police officer. Walton worked undercover for many years, buying drugs from traffickers in sting operations as well as gathering information on outlaw motorcycle gangs. He explained that the way he currently looked, with his shaven head and gold earring in the left ear, was much like the disguise he used as an undercover officer. He said he was explaining that so the kids new the police could blend in and look like anyone else on the drug scene. Walton explained he would be showing some graphic images to the group. "I don't show you these images to frighten you or shock you, but to educate you," he said. The first image showed a decapitated body laying below a railroad bridge. He explained the body was that of a drug trafficker who had been trying to flee the police and who'd jumped over a fence, not knowing he was on a railroad bridge. He fell to his death, and during the fall struck a picket fence which decapitated him. "This kid didn't use drugs, but he died from drugs," Walton said. Walton explained the various reasons people use drugs, from pleasure to family influence, and that the several reasons given were compiled by social scientists. "Regardless of the obvious danger, some people still use them and it behooves us to understand why," he said. He said the youngest addict he'd ever dealt with was an eight-year-old girl who'd been introduced to crack cocaine by her father when she was seven. He added this exemplified how some youth are badly influenced by their families. Then he talked about injected drugs like cocaine, heroin and meth. "They are probably the most dangerous drugs in the world," he said, adding the method of use compounded their danger because of the risk of getting hepatitis, aids and other blood-born diseases from the needles. He said the drugs were highly addictive. "I never met anyone who just wanted to smoke crack cocaine, but the graduated to that," he said. Coke users need to inject themselves about 30 times a day just so they don't get sick once they're addicted, Walton said. That adds up to about 20,000 injections per year. He added users try to find places to inject themselves so the needle marks - known as track marks - don't show. Some inject in between their toes because of the good blood flow in the area and because the feet are usually completely covered, so no one can see the marks. "People who are using drugs like cocaine, heroin and meth start making very bad decisions," he said. He showed the audience a picture of the arm of a person who'd injected using dirty needles and from the wrist to the elbow, the arm was covered with red and black welts because of a viral infection. Another picture showed the resulting wounds of someone suffering from 'coke bugs', or the drug-induced feeling bugs were crawling under the skin. The feeling leads to the addict scratching away at himself, trying to dig the bugs from under his skin. He spoke about heroin and how it was becoming an alarming trend among youth to smoke it, in the erroneous belief that smoking it meant they wouldn't become addicted to it. Meth, he said, is made of dangerous and toxic poisons. It causes a terrible rashes, dry itchy skin and poor dental hygiene as well as a bad body odour. "When someone is in the company of a meth user it's really easy to detect because they have a foul odour," he said. He added that, from the first time the drug is used to the death of the user is about 10 years for a meth addict. Walton also showed the audience a video clip of drug users talking about their addictions. The second woman shown, Carly, suffered terribly from coke bugs. Her arm was horribly scarred with an open wound in which tissue was exposed. 0She said she would even inject into the wound on occasion. Walton said that eventually, Carly died from her addiction. "If Carly had a crystal ball I don't think she would have wanted to be a sex trade worker and die at 30 of a coke-induced heart attack." He also spoke about marihuana, which he said carries 2,200 more toxins than cigarettes and is harmful to the lung, brain, liver and kidneys. He said THC, the active ingredient in marihuana, is found at a much greater percentage now than it was in previous generations, making it even more dangerous. "For some reason we don't thing marihuana causes harm. That's just good marketing on the part of marihuana advocates." He also spoke about ecstasy, LSD and psilocbins which are all hallucinogens. "They get marketed to your generation more than any other drug. They are cheap and provide a long high," he said. He added the drugs are obviously marketed for kids, with ecstasy often being sold in a pill form that looks like sweet tarts when they are actually a white powder. And LSD is added to food colouring bottles, making it look harmless as well when it is anything but. "They hope that when young people see them they'll think they're harmless," he said. Psilocbins are also called magic mushrooms and are toxic. Walton finished with a story about a one-time user of ecstasy who tried it at a grad party after being talked into it by well-meaning friends. She reacted to the drug and died in the hospital 40 hours after first ingesting the drug. "When drug use is being decided we have to look at all the consequences," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin