Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jul 2010 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kim Bolan GANGSTERS HAVE A NEW DRUG OF CHOICE More and more are popping the painkiller OxyContin to take the edge off their violent lives When gangster Dennis Karbovanec walked into a Surrey high-rise in October 2007 and shot three people in the head, he was addicted to the powerful prescription painkiller OxyContin. And when his former Red Scorpion gang-mate Anton Hooites-Meursing played a role in the same Surrey Six murder plot, he was also struggling with an addiction to the pill police say is akin to "prescription heroin." Jamie Bacon, the purported Red Scorpion leader, is similarly addicted to the drug, according to a Surrey pretrial memo highlighted in a recent B.C. Supreme Court ruling condemning Bacon's jail conditions. Police say an increasing number of mid-level B.C. gangsters are popping Oxys to relieve the stress and pain of their volatile life in the criminal underworld. And one former gangster says the big problem with the synthetic opiate used to control intense pain is that it removes inhibitions to troubling gang behaviours including acts of brutality and violence. In the last two months alone, Abbotsford police have arrested two gang-linked men with sizable stashes of OxyContin. Dave Chubb was picked up June 16 after Abbotsford's Gang Suppression Unit raided a local apartment and found pot, cocaine and 100 OxyContin tablets. They also seized two handguns, a silencer and ammunition, leading to a series of gun and drug charges against Chubb. Six weeks earlier, the same gang unit arrested Chubb's associate Lance Wust, a longtime Fraser Valley gang member, allegedly with 200 Oxy pills, a loaded handgun, ammunition, two bulletproof vests and $ 3,000 cash. In May, Jamie Bacon was convicted of possession for the purpose of trafficking for 108 Oxy pills seized from him in May 2008 when police arrested him on a series of gun charges for which he was also recently found guilty. Abbotsford police Det. Andrew Wooding, a gang expert, says more and more of the mid-level players in organized crime seem to be using OxyContin. "OxyContin is on the rise in a huge way," he said. "I can't speak about every single gang or gangster, but in my experience, Oxy use crosses all boundaries." Hells Angels, United Nations, Red Scorpions, Independent Soldiers: these are just a few of the gangs with members using the mind-altering opiate. "It is very stressful to live in that world. In the last five years, everybody has to look over their shoulder. The stakes are very high. It has had a huge effect on the stress level of these guys," Wooding said. "We have seen in a short time period, as things have become more volatile, the increase in Oxy use." So why would B.C. gang members misuse such an addictive medication? What does it do for them? Like heroin, it creates a sense of euphoria. James Coulter, a former United Nations gang member who now works with recovering addicts, said many in gang life first take OxyContin to ease the pain of strenuous gym workouts. The drug numbs them, making it easier to do longer stretches and more intense exercise. Oxy also takes the edge off before gangsters go for tattoos, Coulter said. Those taking it don't realize how addictive it is. Nor do they understand it also dulls them emotionally, he said. "Your emotions are feeling that way, too. It numbs you physically and numbs you mentally," Coulter said. "It is bad for beating someone up or treating women like shit because those using it don't have the normal emotional response. They don't care." A growing problem OxyContin is the brand name of a pill containing oxycodone that was first sold in 1996. Percocets also contain oxycodone, but in a lower dosage -- usually 5 mg. Many U.S. cities have documented OxyContin problems over the last decade. Oxy has become so common and cheap south of the border that it has been dubbed "Hillbilly Heroin." In the States, Oxy attracted the middle class with American soccer moms meeting their dealers in parking lots to score, said Sgt. Pete Sadler, of Vancouver's drug squad. The most famous Oxy addict, right-wing talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, admitted in 2003 that he had taken up to 30 pills a day before going to rehab. Sadler said that in Vancouver, Oxy is not commonly used by the local street addict population who prefer "traditional" B.C. drugs like heroin and cocaine. Here Oxy is "a prestige" street drug, he said, that can cost up to $80 a pill. "It is different among your gangster types. They have more access to it and more inclination to use it," Sadler said. "It is not something some amateur chemist is making in his room at Main and Hastings. It is not cut with rat poison because they are using it personally." In fact, police believe B.C.'s entire Oxy supply is coming from prescriptions filled at local pharmacies. Gangsters buy the pills or take them off addict customers in exchange for other drugs. "People who have legal prescriptions for Oxy are now being targeted. Gangsters are buying up their legitimate prescriptions," Wooding said. "Finding the supply is always the trickiest." Both Wooding and Sadler think entrepreneurial local gangs will undoubtedly begin manufacturing Oxy, given its potential resale profit. But because it is a drug they also use, quality control will be essential. "Because the supply is somewhat limited, it is only a matter of time before they are actually producing the pills," Wooding said. More and more prescription Oxy is being provided every year to those covered by B.C.'s Pharmacare program, according to B.C. government statistics. The program aids low-income British Columbians and those with high prescription costs. Almost three million more Oxy pills were dispensed to program recipients in 2009 than two years earlier. In 2006-2007, those on Pharmacare were prescribed 12.89 million pills containing oxycodone. In 2007-2008, 14 million Oxys were legally dispensed and by last fiscal year -- 2008-2009 -- the number of pills was up to 15.8 million. Sadler said Downtown Eastside addicts with legitimate medical issues will target doctors they know will give them Oxy prescriptions over other less-valuable painkillers. A lucky addict will feel like "he just won the lottery," Sadler said. "He'll take the pills down to Carnegie and he'll sell them down there." Oxys go for $1 per milligram of oxycodone on the street, Sadler said. So Percocets with just five milligrams cost $5, while Oxy 40s go for $40 and Oxy 80s cost $80 a pill. "Will people pay it? Yes. They can trust it will do what it's supposed to do," he said. Some of the Oxy illicitly sold in B.C. also comes from pharmacy break-ins. Some Metro Vancouver pharmacies post signs saying they don't stock OxyContin any more, hoping to deter thieves. Marshall Moleschi, registrar of the College of Pharmacists, said his organization is constantly working with members to address the problem. "We participated in the break-in task force," he said. "We are looking for ways to deal with this issue." And the B.C. Health Ministry has programs in place to curb abuse of Oxy prescriptions, ministry spokesman Ryan Jabs said. Jabs said the Restricted Claimant Review program has identified 3,200 patients who "may only receive prescriptions from a single doctor and may only fill their prescriptions at a single pharmacy" because of previous abuse. OxyContin is also part of a special Duplicate Prescription Program, meaning doctors must use a special pad for writing prescriptions. "These prescription forms are personalized for each physician, numerically recorded and cannot be exchanged between prescribers," Jabs said. While police say they don't believe Oxy is being manufactured by gangs in B.C., others connected to the criminal world told The Vancouver Sun that it is in fact being made here in labs that are also producing ecstasy. Gangsters seem to be willing to take the pills because they are produced legally, Wooding said. "It seems that when they put things in pill form, it removes the street-level stigma," he said. Popping a neat little pill is "better than people using street drugs." But the gangster addicts don't use OxyContin as prescribed. The pills contain binders so that the drug is released slowly once swallowed to provide continuous pain relief for 12 or 24 hours. Gangsters chew the pill for an instant rush, Wooding said. He has also seen Oxys ground into powder and snorted. He knows other users liquefy the pill and inject them. "When you chew them, you get a more intense high, then it drops off and it is just a mellow thing," he said. Addiction denied Wooding first noticed gangster Oxy use when he was seconded to the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit five years ago to work on a project targeting the East End chapter of the Hells Angels. Some of those being watched "were chewing on these things all day," Wooding said. Police followed as some of the bikers drove for hours -- all the way to Chilliwack and back -- to score Oxy. "We wondered what it was they were doing, driving great distances to pick up what seemed like a few pills. They were really addicted," he said. Since then, he has seen more and more of the pills being used by gang members who slip into addiction while continuing to deny they have a problem. When they are arrested and police find Oxy on them, they always claim: "I am not addicted," Wooding said. But once they are in jail, they are struggling. "After 45 minutes, they are begging us to get out. In our business, we see Oxy as our best friend. Oxy turns these guys into our best friends. They are almost desperate," Wooding said. He said Oxy addiction makes some of the gang members willing to cooperate. "They'll say 'What do you need to know?' They want to get out so badly. It is true," Wooding said. Wooding said he hopes "that message might just deter some people from getting into it." OxyContin addict Brittney Lee Irving, who had links to the Independent Soldiers gang, was killed in Kelowna in April on her way to sell a large quantity of pot. A former Soldier is now charged with her murder. And several members of the UN gang charged with plotting to kill rival Red Scorpions had Oxy among other drugs and weapons when they were arrested last year, police said at the time. No one will say if OxyContin has had a direct impact on the level of violence in Metro Vancouver's gang war. When Karbovanec pleaded guilty to three of the Surrey Six slayings in April 2009, a brief statement about his addiction was read in B.C. Supreme Court as "general background." There was no indication of whether the drug played a role in the deadliest gangland slaying in B.C. history. "He was addicted to OxyContin at the time of the commission of these offences," is all the statement said. Hooites-Meursing, who pleaded guilty in April 2010 to two murders committed in 2001 and 2003, will be a key Crown witness when four others linked to the Red Scorpions go to trial in 2011. Hooites-Meursing told The Sun in a series of e-mails that he had also struggled with an Oxy addiction. "Turning back to the use of pills, and OxyContin in particular, was very expensive, but very conducive to numb the pain of loneliness, the pain of memories, the nightmares that plagued my every night, the night terrors," Hooites-Meursing said in a March 2010 e-mail. Even some jailed gangsters have access to OxyContin. A 2007 B.C. Supreme Court ruling on the sentencing of former Bacon associate Steve Porsch for a series of arson fires, noted that Porsch "has had access to marijuana and OxyContin while imprisoned." Wooding said it is understandable that those caught in gang life would need some form of stress relief. But, he said, the addiction "really is the beginning of the end for many." "These are the guys who are in the tough spot," Wooding said. "When you are thinking about going out and hunting someone down to kill them or hunting someone down to kidnap them, you need something to take the edge off." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt