Pubdate: Wed, 9 Jan 2008
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Jane Gross
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Extreme+Ecstasy (Extreme Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

RISE SEEN IN TRAFFICKING OF ENHANCED ECSTASY

Methamphetamine-laced Ecstasy is flowing across the Canadian border 
into the United States, according to a warning last week from the 
federal government to public health and local law enforcement officials.

The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy reports that 
seizures of Ecstasy at the northern border increased tenfold from 
2003 to 2006, with more than half of the contraband tablets 
containing methamphetamine, a vastly more addicting drug. This 
matches findings by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

The development comes after an uptick in Ecstasy use after years of 
waning popularity for the club drug and just as the supply of 
methamphetamine is being strangled at the Mexican border. Some law 
enforcement and treatment experts hypothesize that the turbocharged 
combination is an effort by traffickers to reverse trends unfavorable 
to their business by marketing a new product at a new point of entry.

Ecstasy, which gained popularity in the 1990s rave culture, had been 
in steep decline since 2001, but began to creep upward in 2005 and 
2006, when first-time users increased by 40 percent, a third of them 
under the age of 18, according to a variety of studies.

At more or less the same time, the supply of methamphetamine in the 
United States has been substantially reduced, first by shutting 
domestic laboratories and then by new cooperation from the Mexican 
government in controlling its manufacture and smuggling.

"This is simply my opinion," said Scott Burns, a deputy director at 
the drug control policy office, "but drug traffickers often have to 
reinvent or come up with new products when what we're doing is working."

Steven J. Shoptaw, a professor of family medicine and a 
methamphetamine expert at the University of California, Los Angeles, 
drew the same conclusion, citing a doubling of the street price of 
methamphetamine nationwide as a result of tight supply. "It could be 
a brilliant marketing ploy in the face of enforcement success," Dr. 
Shoptaw said. "First you make a variation on the product and then you 
move its production."

The Drug Enforcement Administration, for its part, said there was "no 
direct linkage" between the producers and distributors in Mexico and 
those in Canada. "The flow of Ecstasy from Canada is operating 
independently at this point from the flow of methamphetamine from 
Mexico," said Rogene Waite, a spokeswoman for the drug agency.

But, Ms. Waite added, the drug agency's intelligence officers are 
exploring whether combining the two illegal stimulants is "a 
marketing ploy to hook more people on meth," widely regarded by 
treatment professionals as more pernicious than Ecstasy.

Treatment professionals say addiction to Ecstasy, a synthetic 
stimulant, is rare. But it can induce euphoria, hallucinations, 
memory loss, elevated body temperature and increased heart rate. 
Methamphetamine, also a synthetic stimulant that can reduce sexual 
inhibitions, is highly addictive, these experts say, with a half life 
of 8 to 12 hours, versus an hour or two for Ecstasy alone. In 
combination, these experts say, the dangers of each drug could be magnified.

To date, the "Extreme Ecstasy" or "Meth X," as Mr. Burns called the 
adulterated pills, has not been the source of emergency room 
admissions, overdoses or new clients in substance-abuse programs, 
according to experts on both the law enforcement and the treatment 
side. But all agree that there is generally a time lag between what 
crosses the border and what affects communities.

"We wouldn't expect to see sick kids, or others signs of this drug in 
use, for months," said Dr. Mitchell S. Rosenthal, founder of Phoenix 
House, a nationwide network of treatment centers. "But the fact that 
it isn't on the ground yet doesn't make it less ominous. Why wait 
until we've seen umpteen overdoses in the northern part of the country?"

Ecstasy, which is often adulterated with other substances, including 
talcum powder and sedatives, has always been most popular with 
dance-the-night-away young adults and teenagers. While below the peak 
in 2002, first-time users increased from 2005 to 2006, to 860,000 
from 615,000, various federal studies say. In the same time period, 
the number of young adults who used Ecstasy in the past month rose to 
326,000, from 231,000. And fewer 8th and 10th graders reported that 
they believed Ecstasy was risky.

At the United States' northern border, federal law enforcement 
officials seized 5,485,619 doses of Ecstasy in 2006, according to the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy, compared with 568,220 in 
2003. United States officials say that 55 percent of the 2006 
seizures contained methamphetamine. Data from the Royal Canadian 
Mounted Police, while not identical, reflects a comparable trend: 5.2 
million hits seized in 2006, up from 1.1 million in 2004. According 
to the Canadian government, 70 percent of the 2006 samples tested 
were laced with methamphetamine. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake