Pubdate: Thu, 19 Jan 2012 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Sam Cooper, The Province TEEN MAY HAVE HAD DEATH WISH Friend Of Drug-Overdose Victim Kato Burgess Says Buddy 'Looked Really Bad' Kato Burgess's best friend says Kato was bullied at school and may have "wanted to die" before apparently taking a fatal overdose of ecstasy. Kato, 16, started buying drugs from older teens in December and staying up all night partying, said Matt Delaney, a close school friend. According to Delaney, Kato last weekend "looked really bad. He had been taking about 20 sleeping pills at a time. Like he would take the whole bottle. His face was white, and his eyes were bloodshot. "Everyone at school would pick on him, and in a way I kind of think he wanted to die," Delaney said. "I wanted to save him, but I didn't know how to do it. Now, it's too late." Kato, a Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary student, died Sunday morning after reportedly taking ecstasy along with other pharmaceuticals. The B.C. Coroners Service says toxicology testing will determine whether the ecstasy included PMMA, a toxic compound linked to at least five deaths in B.C. in the past six months, along with several ecstasy deaths in Alberta. Delaney said Kato was troubled by a bro-ken home and had difficulty adjusting after moving from Penticton several years ago. The two used to hang out every day, Delaney said, playing hockey and talking about starting a masonry company. But when Burgess started buying drugs, Delaney had to "step away." Surrey School District officials said they can't confirm any details about Kato. The victim's uncle, Adam Burgess of Penticton, said he hadn't seen him much in the past year. "He was a great kid," Adam Burgess said. "We used to go hiking all the time. This is tough." Drug counsellor Robb McGirr was speaking to classes at Surrey schools on Wednesday. McGirr, a former policeman, said experts have long told youth that ecstasy pills are a dangerous cocktail of chemicals. But the toxicity of the PMMA-linked pills is driving home a new sense of fear. "We are not used to the fatalities, so we are on a new level, no doubt," McGirr said. "The students are starting to get it - your dealer will not even know what [a pill contains]." Art Steinmann, manager of Vancouver schools' drug-abuse prevention program, said a small number of the area's 25,000 students are known to take ecstasy. "The fact that there is bad 'E' out there is a big concern, and all of our staff are engaged," Steinmann said. He said counsellors strive to talk to youth as openly as possible about the inherent risks of drugs, and parents should follow the same model. "Tragic as these deaths are, these situations do give us an opportunity for more dialogue," Steinmann said. "We need to get at the root issues. These kids are not stupid. They are trying to deal with things like isolation, hurt, loss. Some are living in chaotic homes." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.