Pubdate: Fri, 04 Jan 2008 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Dave Battagello, CanWest News Service WHITE HOUSE WARNS OF DEADLY CANADIAN METH-ECSTASY PILLS Combination Drug Smuggled Into U.S. A resurgence of the use of ecstasy by young Americans is being fuelled by Canadian producers smuggling the illegal chemical drug -- which is increasingly laced with crystal meth -- into the United States, according to White House drug czar John Walters. The director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy is warning Americans to be aware of a "dangerous new drug threat coming from Canada." Canadian-made ecstasy pills laced with crystal meth are being dumped into the U.S., prompting Walters to issue a warning Thursday. "Certainly we are very concerned about this combo product coming south," said a top official from the Washington office, who asked not to be named. "We need people to know this drug is much more dangerous (than ecstasy)." More than 55 per cent of the ecstasy samples seized in the U.S. last year contained methamphetamine, according to the policy office. Drug enforcement authorities in the U.S. have been working with the RCMP to learn of the origins of the ecstasy-meth pills, he said. Walters called the "extreme ecstasy" a disturbing development. "Historic progress against ecstasy availability and use is in jeopardy of being rolled back by Canadian criminal organizations," he said on Thursday. "Desperate to develop their client base, they are dangerously altering a product for which demand by youth and young adults had plummeted and are exploiting vulnerabilities along our shared border. "This is alarming for the youth of both Canada and the United States." The drug combination of methamphetamine and ecstasy can have severe health consequences, as both have toxic effects on the brain, according to the policy office. Together the drugs can interfere with the body's ability to regulate temperature, leading to hypothermia -- which can result in liver, kidney, cardiovascular system failure and death. The potential for a life-threatening or fatal overdose is further increased when meth-laced ecstasy is combined with alcohol. The combination of ecstasy and meth on the streets of Windsor, Ont., across the border from Detroit has not yet been a problem, says to a Windsor police officer in the drugs, intelligence and guns unit. It is much more lucrative for traffickers to sell ecstacy in the U.S., where a single pill fetches between $30 and $50 -- up to 10 times the rate on this side of the border, he said. China and India have been identified as nearly the exclusive producers of the chemicals needed to make the street pills, said the U.S. drug authority. "The chemicals are smuggled into Canada we believe primarily by Asian organized groups," he said. "You have criminal groups with ties to those countries who get the raw ingredients . . . to Canada and that has caused problems for both (Canada and U.S.) populations." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart