Pubdate: Wed, 03 Sep 2008 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Naoibh O'Connor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COPS DEBUNK CRYSTAL METH EMAIL No Evidence To Support Schoolyard 'Strawberry Quick' Warning Do you know "strawberry quick"? Coloured pink, it looks like strawberry pop rocks--the candy that sizzles and pops in your mouth--but it's actually crystal methamphetamine circulated in schoolyards to lure kids into drug use. Kids ingest it, believing it's candy, and must be rushed to hospital. The drug also comes in chocolate, peanut butter, cola, cherry, grape and orange. This warning is being circulated through email as the new school year approaches. People who receive it are asked to read it and tell their kids. "Pass this email on to as many people as you can (even if they don't have kids) so that we can raise awareness and hopefully prevent any tragedies from occurring," the message advises. Sounds scary, but there's one major problem--according to police, the story is an Internet hoax. Detective Jim Fisher, Vancouver Police Department Drug/Gang Section Operational Intelligence Coordinator, said the flavoured crystal meth advisory has circulated online since January 2007, but there appears to be no truth to it. The drug section has not recovered or been made aware of any methamphetamine flavoured with anything resembling Strawberry Quik. "We've done some research on it because [the question] comes up fairly frequently for us," he said. Although methamphetamine can have a purplish hue if it was manufactured using red phosphorus, it's a naturally occurring colour and is not added by dealers for appeal, he added. Health Canada drug analysis labs, which test drug seizures, have confirmed they have never had any such sample submitted to them for analysis, according to Fisher. Drug section members also frequently speak to colleagues elsewhere in B.C., in Alberta and Ontario, but Fisher has never heard of any seizures of flavoured meth in any other Canadian jurisdictions. "We've never seen any flavoured or scented or anything advertised like that. What addicts are looking for is really good crystal. The closer to the lab, the bigger the crystal," he said. "The more times it's handled, the more it breaks down and if you're trying to enhance somebody's likelihood of buying your dope, rather than somebody else's dope, that's what they would want to see--really good crystals." The origin of the hoax hasn't been established, but it may be that an original warning gets misinterpreted as it's passed along. "It could have been something where people are saying, 'Hey, this is being said. It doesn't exist, but be careful,' and then it gets morphed into, 'This exists and be careful.'" Fisher also suspects some people with good intentions forward the email to other people without researching. "Probably the origin will be somebody trying to do a service without doing any kind of checking--a parents group, a PTA group or something like that," he said. "There's no harm in warning [kids about drugs]. But if they [parents] feel they need to warn them about methamphetamine, the truth is the most common way it's being distributed right now is as a portion of ecstasy." Most buyers aren't aware that the majority of pills police have seized and analyzed contain a other drug besides MDMA [ecstasy], and the majority of the pills contain a significant amount of meth. Other drugs found in ecstasy pills include ketamine, cocaine and ephedrine. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath