Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2007 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2007 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Malcolm Knox PARANOIA, VIOLENCE AND DEATH: A MOUNTING TOLL THIRTY-SIX years ago an American psychiatrist named Everett Ellinwood published a study examining 13 people who had committed homicide while under the influence of amphetamines. He discovered a three-stage pattern: 1. Chronic amphetamine abuse led to paranoid thinking and carrying a weapon; 2. During a binge of drug use and sleep deprivation, the person started to have delusions about what was going on around them; 3. An event triggered the person, who thought he or she was endangered, to respond with extreme violence. No such study has been undertaken in Australia. The Herald has investigated court documents and other records to unveil a pattern that reinforces Ellinwood's thesis: that the purest amphetamine-type stimulants, such as the 80 per cent pure ice, are more specifically related to aggression than any other illicit drugs. Australian statistics are "blunt instruments", says one of the country's leading methamphetamine researchers, Rebecca McKetin, of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre. The Drug Use Monitoring in Australia project collects drug test data from some police detainees, and Dr McKetin's recent study with the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research compared methamphetamine-related arrests and assault rates. The bureau's director, Don Weatherburn, said the project's figures were "pretty reliable" in sketching a broad relationship between methamphetamine use and crime, "but the evidence is not conclusive enough to settle the issue". There are many uncollated stories, isolated yet horrifying, of the devastating impact of methamphetamine psychoses. The drug's role in many of these crimes, and some of the crimes themselves, have never been revealed in the media. The Herald has seen evidence of many more that do not reach court or are resolved in lower courts. Legal and police sources have told the Herald that the cases below represent a bare fraction of the nationwide trauma stemming from methamphetamine psychoses. Novica Jakimov A talented but hot-headed sportsman, Jakimov became a bricklayer after leaving school. After splitting from his wife in 2001, Jakimov increased his intake of illegal drugs, including speed and ice. On the night of August 18, 2003, Jakimov went to Melbourne's Crown Casino, where he met a 26-year-old prostitute, Kelly Hodge. Promising he had heroin, he drove her to the house he was renting in the Melbourne suburb of Westmeadows. When they got there, about 3.30am, they smoked ice and had sex. Agitated, Hodge wanted heroin, but Jakimov said he had only ice, speed and cocaine. They smoked more ice and had sex again, after which Hodge criticised him for promising her heroin. Jakimov lost his temper and beat Hodge lethally with various implements, including a spirit level and an umbrella. Still under the influence of ice, he wrapped her body in a black sheet and dumped it in a gully off Old Sydney Road in Beveridge. Jakimov testified in court that he, a 78-kilogram man, had killed the 50-kilogram Hodge in self-defence. A jury convicted him of murder and he was sentenced to 19 years' jail. CB and IM In August 2004 a 22-year-old man, whom the courts codenamed CB, was living with his ice dealer, Gavin Atkin, above a restaurant in Mayfield, Newcastle. CB's friend, IM, 23, was living nearby with his mother. The two became heavy ice users in 2004. On August 9, 2004, Atkin went fishing and returned to his flat after midnight. CB and IM arrived about 4am, intending to steal drugs from him. CB's relationship with Atkin had been souring for some time, involving mutual accusations and paranoia. CB and IM, who had injected one to three grams of ice that day, set upon Atkin with a metal bar and pool cue. At that point Garry Samson arrived, hoping to buy some cannabis from Atkin. CB and IM pulled Samson inside and attacked him with a wrench and a pool cue. Atkin survived but Sansom died from his wounds. A psychiatrist, Bruce Westmore, concluded that CB had been suffering schizophrenia or a drug-induced psychosis. IM told another psychiatrist "we were both lost and scattered to the max" and were "not sure what was real and what was not". The NSW Supreme Court agreed that the drug had blinded them to the consequences of their actions, but they were still convicted of murder and assault and are serving more than 20 years' jail. Andrew Kastrappis Kastrappis, 43, lived alone in a flat in Pooraka, Adelaide. He had used cannabis and amphetamines since his early 20s, but it was not until early 2005 that he started using ice. On the night of July 16-17, 2005, he suffered an ice-induced psychotic episode or an onset of paranoid schizophrenia and forced open the back door of a neighbouring unit. The neighbour woke to find Kastrappis brushing his penis across her face. He said she had to have sex with him or 200 men would come to her house and "there will be trouble". The District Court of South Australia found Kastrappis not guilty of trespass and indecent assault on the grounds of mental incompetence. Mostafa Abdulkader and John Hohaia Abdulkader and Hohaia used methamphetamines together as well as drinking heavily and using other drugs. On the night of December 2, 2003, they were at Hohaia's mother's house in Belmore for a drinking and smoking session and called an acquaintance, Alexander Szirt. About midnight Hohaia flared up at the visitor and tried to choke him. Szirt agreed to go out and buy alcohol, but when he came back Abdulkader and Hohaia assaulted him again and took him to an automatic teller machine to withdraw money. Then they took him to a park and beat him brutally. He died from his injuries. As Hohaia and Abdulkader denied the charges in court, nothing was known about why an argument between friends escalated into a murderous assault. But Justice David Kirby in the NSW Supreme Court noted that Hohaia had "said that Mr Szirt was not 'like them'. "He was right. Mr Szirt was not like them. He had a job. He had prospects. He was paying off his car. He came from a loving family. It appears, at least on the part of Mr Hohaia, that there was envy in respect of the advantages Alexander Szirt enjoyed." Hohaia and Abdulkader were sentenced respectively to 24 and 21 years in jail. Darren Jason Blackburn Blackburn, a New Zealander, became a substance abuser in his early teens. After moving to Australia at 24, he increased his dependence on alcohol and cannabis and met a man about 30 years older, Graham "Banjo" Band. They became drinking buddies and Blackburn moved into Band's flat in Seddon, Victoria, sleeping on the floor. Blackburn met a young woman and continued to sleep on Band's floor. Twice Band raped the woman, who had a daughter to Blackburn, without Blackburn knowing. Blackburn started taking ice and suffered auditory hallucinations. Hearing voices, he assaulted strangers in the street. In 2004 his relationship with the young woman broke down and he moved into Band's new flat, in Footscray. Another man, Tasman O'Connor, was also living there. On January 31, 2004, Blackburn confronted Band, 62, over the rape allegations. Band said, "F--- the bitch," and O'Connor and Blackburn assaulted Band with a coffee table and a samurai sword, killing him. Blackburn pleaded guilty to manslaughter. A Victorian court, accepting his drug-induced mental impairment, sentenced him to nine years in prison. Justin John de Gruchy In 2003, de Gruchy was an unemployed truck driver who befriended heroin-addicted prostitutes in the St Kilda area of Melbourne and offered them ice as a way to "wean" them off heroin. He would then bully them for money and sex. In June 2003 he was living with a 38-year-old prostitute, Christine Hammond, who was providing sexual favours in return for ice. On the night of June 23, de Gruchy, Hammond and a 15-year-old girl picked up another prostitute. Under de Gruchy's ice-fuelled direction, Hammond and the girl raped the victim with a rolling pin and degraded her in various ways. De Gruchy, the principal offender, was convicted on six counts and sentenced to five years in prison. Todd James Bookham Bookham, a 21-year-old welder, had suffered from depression since his teens. When he moved into a house in Swan Hill, Victoria, with friends in 2004 he began taking increasing amounts of alcohol, cannabis and amphetamines. Bookham started a relationship with Karen Lee Anne-Marie Fairbairn, but his paranoia took hold and he accused her of having an affair with her stepsister, Annette Mary-Jayne Elliott. Fairbairn ended the relationship with Bookham. On December 30, 2004, he took what a judge called "extraordinary amounts of amphetamines", including ice, visited Fairbairn and begged her to take him back. She said she did not love him any more. He put his arm around her neck and said, "If you move, I'll slit your throat," pulled out a hunting knife and cut her throat - not fatally. Fairbairn screamed, and Elliott appeared. Bookham stabbed Elliott in the chest, not fatally, in front of a child, then ran away and called an ambulance. Bookham pleaded guilty to attempted murder and was sentenced to 11 years in jail. Trent Jennings Late in 2003, Jennings was an 18-year-old living in Narwee. On December 30 he met Giuseppe Vitale in an online chat room. They agreed to meet that night and to engage in sexual play. Vitale, 32, picked up Jennings in his car. After making contact with Vitale, Jennings swallowed a number of ecstasy pills and injected methamphetamine. He had a backpack containing condoms, lubricant, a bottle of amyl nitrite, a rope and a knife. They drove to a reserve and walked to a bridge, where Vitale tied Jennings to a rail and performed oral sex on him. They then swapped roles. At that point, Jennings later told psychiatrists, he started "freaking out" and hearing male voices saying they were going to rape him. Auditory hallucinations, a common result of heavy ice use, had haunted him previously. He grabbed his knife, lashed out at Vitale and ran away. Vitale died while trying to get back to his car. Three forensic psychiatrists testified that Jennings was suffering a drug-induced psychosis or had an acute schizophrenic illness triggered by the drugs. Justice David Kirby in the Supreme Court found Jennings not guilty by reason of mental illness. David Andrew Wright On a methamphetamine and alcohol binge in December 1999, Wright, a Gold Coast chef, went to the house of his former employer, Peggy Serone, with the intention of robbing her. When Mrs Serone saw him, he picked up a kitchen knife and murdered her. Justice Michael Adams in the NSW Supreme Court said Wright could be inferred to have been under the influence of methamphetamine, "largely because of the savagery of the attack, suggestive of incomplete control". Wright did not have a record of criminal conduct until he started taking ice. Dudley Mark Aslett Aslett was a career criminal and drug user who had no history of extreme violence until he began smoking ice in early 2003. Although heroin had long been his drug of choice, he took to ice with a vengeance. After smoking it on May 3, 2003, Aslett and two younger accomplices followed a woman to her car in Newington and raped her at knifepoint before attempting to use her debit card at automatic teller machines. On July 17, 2003, he and his accomplices raped a 16-year-old in front of her parents. On July 28 they robbed a convenience store at Canley Heights of about $6500, cigarettes and mobile phones, holding the two employees at knifepoint. Later, Aslett tied up Matthew Ryder, an employee of a Bob Jane T-Mart, and stole money, phones and a utility. Two nights later Aslett confronted Eduardo Arbis with a baseball bat at the Auburn Shooting Academy, stealing a revolver and a semi-automatic pistol. The following night, Aslett grabbed Jeky Li as he left his Auburn lighting store and stole about $200 and a mobile phone. The next day, Aslett tried to rob Emad Youssef of the day's takings at his Canley Heights pharmacy. Youssef fought back, and Aslett shot him dead with the revolver. Aslett's gang stole a car on August 6 and drove it to Toowoon Bay Cellars on the Central Coast, holding an employee at gunpoint and stealing about $600. Five days later they robbed $1840 from the Ourimbah Post Office. On August 13 they robbed a newsagency in Wyoming, then, the following day, broke into the Bateau Bay Post Office and stole $4000. Six days later they stole another car, then held up the National Australia Bank in the Westfield shopping centre at Tuggerah and stole more than $28,000 in cash. Aslett was arrested on August 22. Among his immediate confessions was that he was unable to sleep as he was "thinking about the dead man". He had been smoking ice throughout his rampage, as well as smoking heroin to calm down. He is serving life in prison. Matthew Gagalowicz Gagalowicz had used drugs since his teens, but meth had become his drug of choice by February 16, 2003, when he asked Ricky Mark Smith to visit the Bulli house Gagalowicz was sharing with his girlfriend and another couple. Within a week of moving in together the four friends were pooling their Centrelink allowances to buy ice from Smith, 41. With "the blood pounding in my head", Gagalowicz set upon Smith with a baseball bat, smashing him in the head 12 times. Gagalowicz and his housemates immediately injected themselves with the methamphetamine Smith had brought. Gagalowicz dismembered Smith's body and buried it in a shallow grave. In the Supreme Court, Justice Michael Adams took into account Gagalowicz's history of ice-induced psychoses and the fact that he was impaired by the drug when he killed Smith. Gagalowicz pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to eight years in jail. The Court of Criminal Appeal found this inadequate and increased it by two years. Adrian John Van Boxtel Twice in 2001, Van Boxtel attacked his former partner, Simone Snowden, and her family. On April 27, 2002, Van Boxtel consumed some ice, which a court later agreed had a significant effect on his behaviour. Carrying a sawn-off shotgun, he was driven to Snowden's house and shot her car. He then threatened to shoot a man for "causing trouble with" Snowden, whom this man had never met. Under the influence of ice, van Boxtel went on what counsel called "an orgy of offending", including threatening to kill, false imprisonment, aggravated burglary and intentionally causing injury. He was sentenced to 8 1/2 years in jail. THE toll inflicted by ice psychoses continues to mount. The Tamarama financier Brendan Francis McMahon tortured rabbits while an ice addict in 2005. Damien Anthony Peters murdered and dismembered two acquaintances, Andrei Akai and Bevan Frost, in an ice-fuelled eruption in his apartment in the Northcott flats, Surry Hills, in 2001. Muhammed Kerbatieh claimed it was his addiction to ice that was responsible for the sexual assaults of three schoolgirls in Melbourne in 2001. Azzam Abdul Hamid was jailed for a succession of horrific assaults on his de facto partners while a heavy methamphetamine user. "Fired up", on his own admission, by methamphetamines, Gerald Douglas Morrison stabbed his lover, the 58-year-old brothel owner and drug dealer Jaynee Sheridan, and tried to kill her friend Gwenda Barty in Sheridan's Adelaide house in 2004. Two teenage girls killed their friend Eliza Davis in Western Australia last year after smoking ice. These crimes lie at the extreme fringe of ice users, who number about 73,000, according to the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre. But as the growth of use appears to flatten out, it is the hardcore users who are attracting the most attention from front-line workers and researchers eager to explore options for better treatment. The Drug and Alcohol Research Centre's Rebecca McKetin says that although a clear causal relationship between a drug and homicidal behaviour may never be found, "we certainly have enough evidence to say that the drug is associated with violent behaviour, and enough to target treatment". She is studying the effect of treatment on long-term methamphetamine users. "We need better treatment options targeted to heavy users," she says. "There are some encouraging signs [in the current study] of firm improvement brought about if we are able to get heavy users into treatment programs." What is ice? Ice is a crystalline, purifed form of the stimulant methamphetamine, which is usually smoked or injected. It is 80 to 90 per cent pure, whereas "speed" is 10 to 15 per cent pure. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath