Pubdate: Thu, 07 Jun 2012 Source: Abbotsford Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 The Abbotsford Times Contact: http://www.abbotsfordtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1009 Author: Rochelle Baker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) THE X FACTOR Tears Roll With New Ecstasy Campaign Abbotsford Police screened a new video aimed at preventing ecstasy overdoses and deaths on Tuesday afternoon. The film's first scene shows young people dancing in a club to electronic music. Suddenly, the screen goes black. Then the trembling voice of Abbotsford teenager Drew Fournier is heard during a real life 911 call reporting that her friend Cheryl McCormack has collapsed after taking ecstasy. The operator asks if the teen is breathing. "Barely," Fournier responds. "I'm really scared right now," she tells the woman. Cheryl, 17, took ecstasy at a sleepover with three of her best friends on Dec. 19, 2011, fell into a coma and never woke up. The Grade 12 Bateman Secondary student died three days before Christmas. Less than a month before, 20-year-old Tyler Miller died in hospital after taking ecstasy at a house party. In the wake of the two Abbotsford deaths, The APD decided to make the film Operation X, which outlines the heartbreak of the families and friends of the victims of ecstasy. The documentary will be presented to all Abbotsford secondary schools before the end of June. Cheryl and Tyler's family and friends are also taking part in the presentations to teenage audiences. Abbotsford School of the Integrated Arts students listened gravely on Tuesday as the three friends with Cheryl on the night of her overdose; Cheryl's sister, Shawna McCormack, and a group of Tyler's friends shared their painful experiences. Nobody can be sure of what's in ecstasy, or how their bodies will react to the street drug, they told students. "I hope none of you have to go through what we did," said Shawna. One of Tyler's friends, Josh Williams cried while reading a poem he wrote on the six-month anniversary of his friend's death. Cheryl and Tyler's moms also broke down during the presentation about the loss of their children. "When his picture comes up in the video, I lose it because I miss him so much," said Tyler's mom, Laurie Mossey. Good can come out of her son's death if other youth can be saved, said Mossey. "Tyler didn't die in vain. We're here to tell his story. We're his voice," she said. For Cathy McCormack, the hardest part is viewing that last image of her daughter hooked up to the life support machine at the hospital. "When we thought Cheryl would pull through, we planned to show her that picture if she ever thought about doing drugs again," said McCormack. "We didn't ever have that choice." Shawna - who began speaking publicly about the dangers of ecstasy soon after Cheryl's death - said it's difficult to constantly relive the grief of losing her younger sister during Operation X presentations. "But when kids come up and hug us and tell us,'Thank you,'. . . it lets us know they are listening and it's worth it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom