Pubdate: Mon, 29 Oct 2007
Source: Leaf-Chronicle, The (US TN)
Copyright: 2007, The Leaf-Chronicle
Contact:  http://www.theleafchronicle.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1601
Author: Jamie Dexter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education)

OFFICERS EDUCATE ON THE SEEDY SPECIFICS OF DRUGS

A table in front of Citizen Police Academy students was  covered in 
drugs -- everything from Ecstasy to LSD,  along with paraphernalia 
used to do drugs and common  items people use to hide them.

Agents Daryl Pace and Brad Crowe gave the students a  crash course in 
drugs, beginning with a video of police  using undercover agents to 
bust several sales.

Crowe, who worked 12 years with the Clarksville Police  Department 
Drug Unit, said that no matter what anybody  thinks, drug use "is a problem."

"I don't care what area of town you live in, there are  drugs in your 
neighborhood," he said.

Cocaine

Crowe said the most abused drug in Clarksville is  cocaine, which can 
come in a powdered form or a rock  form called "crack."

The powder form is typically snorted, injected or taken  orally, and 
the effect of a small amount can last 20 to  40 minutes.

The rocks are smoked with a pipe. As the rock melts,  the vapor goes 
into the brain, giving the user a  feeling of euphoria. But each high 
a user receives will  never be as intense as the one before it, which 
leads  to people buying more and more crack and getting money  for it 
in any way they can -- including theft.

After doing the drug so much, users require it to get  back to a normal state.

"I've seen it bring down some high-profile people,"  Crowe said.

Getting off cocaine, Crowe said, is difficult to do  because it 
requires an entire change in lifestyle to  prevent the addict from 
wanting to use again.

Prescription drugs

Prescription drugs are also widely used. Crowe said  these are 
particularly dangerous because people are  taking the pill without 
the advice of a doctor, who  knows how the person's body will respond.

Those who aren't prescribed the drugs usually get them  from someone 
who sells them to cover their cost of  living, often by stealing them 
from terminally ill  patients or drugstores.

An example, Crowe said, is when a local drug store was  robbed of 
OxyContin, a powerful pain pill. Drug stores  rarely carry the 
painkiller anymore.

"It's a case where this drug can really help people in  pain, and 
people abuse them and cause things like that  to happen," Crowe said.

Ecstasy

Ecstasy, known as a party drug, is a "touchy-feely"  drug that is 
taken orally and can be common on or near  college campuses.

The tablets look like normal pills. The drug raises the  body 
temperature and can "cook the brain" if the user  doesn't drink 
enough water. And it can cause the user  to grind his teeth, which 
explains why many rave-goers  are seen with pacifiers hanging around 
their necks.

Marijuana

Marijuana, which is a green plant that is smoked, gives  the user "a 
euphoric feeling" and "allows them to  relax."

The drug also changes the user's perception -- from  sight to 
hearing, taste and smell -- and the user might  "find everything 
funny or raid the refrigerator."

A low dose, Crowe said, causes mild enchantment, and  higher doses 
can lead to paranoia.

During a controlled burn, students got to smell  marijuana smoke -- a 
distinctive odor.

LSD

LSD, otherwise known as acid, alters the user's  awareness and senses 
and can give the user  hallucinatory visions such as the walls 
changing colors  or "breathing," and the visions often don't leave 
when  the user closes his eyes.

Crowe said when someone does LSD, a small molecule  remains in the 
body and can work its way to the brain  several months or years down 
the road, causing a  "flashback," or returning feeling of being on the drug.

Meth

Methamphetamines usually are created in a lab in  someone's home 
using ingredients such as lithium from  batteries, anhydrous ammonia 
and other caustic  materials.

"People often say that the best way to find a meth lab  is to wait 
for one to blow up," Crowe said, noting the  explosive chemicals involved.

The user may lose interest in sex and have welts on the  skin. Users 
also may become violent or have suicidal  urges.

Roots of crime

The effects of drugs on the community, Crowe said, can  be seen in a 
2002 study where 56 percent of local  inmates who committed robberies 
said they did so while  on drugs, 56 percent with weapons charges 
said they  were on drugs and 55 percent with charges of 
burglaries  or motor vehicle theft said the same.

Fighting crimes caused by drug users, Crowe said, is "a  never-ending 
battle that these guys fight every day."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom