Pubdate: Wed, 07 Aug 2013 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2013 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/5NyOACet Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Ron Seymour SHOW YOUR RESPECTS SOBER, PLEASE You know you've lived a troubled life when organizers of your memorial service specifically ask mourners to please show up sober. So it was with the candlelight vigil held Monday evening by people who were close to Marissa Ginter, the 17-year-old Kelowna teen whose death last Friday has received widespread news coverage. "I ask that you please be sober because I do not want drunk people ruining a serious ceremony," vigil organizer Brooke Worrall wrote on Facebook. The untimely death of any young person is a profound tragedy and few of us can imagine the grief being experienced by Ginter's family. But is her passing an intensely private matter or a news story with a cast of villains that includes, in some people's views, "bad" drug dealers, the government, and even the police? A drug-related death, without any suggestion of foul play, almost never makes the news pages. Illegal drugs, unfortunately, are too much a fact of life in the death of too many people. Unintentional injury or accident, a category which includes drug-related fatalities, is the leading cause of death for girls and women in BC aged 15-24. What we know about Ginter is this much: She was found unresponsive in bed Friday morning by a friend who promptly called 911. From her own online postings, it's clear she was a young woman who was streetwise, liked to party and re-posted videos of teens fighting one another. Her grieving parents have asked that donations in her memory be made to Club 180, a Boys and Girls program that helped street kids beat their addictions and gain employment skills. From public condolences offered to the family, a fuller picture of Ginter portrays her as a warm, friendly, vivacious young woman who liked to sing and explore her African ancestry. What we don't know about Ginter, strangely, is what everyone thinks they know - just exactly what caused her death. It's out there now, loose in the Internet, that she died from taking what she believed to be the relatively benign street drug, ecstasy, but which turned out to be something much worse. This belief is based on the second-hand, dubious and often unattributed comments gobbled up on the long weekend by media. One local headline flatly stated "Bad drugs claim life of Kelowna teenager," though there is nothing at this point to suggest that was the case. Sad to say, it probably was just ordinary drugs, which of course are bad enough. Three local teens did get seriously ill last Thursday after buying and using what they thought was ecstasy. Subsequent testing by police showed it was, in fact, heroin. Although all three teens recovered, Kelowna RCMP did the responsible thing on Friday issuing a press release warning that something being pitched as ecstasy had the potential to make users seriously ill. Police were obviously mindful of the fact tens of thousands of young people would be in Kelowna for the popular Centre of Gravity festival, and they deserved a warning that really bad drugs, as opposed to just ordinarily bad drugs, might be circulating, disguised as ecstasy. Then, unfortunately, there was nothing but official silence from the RCMP through the long weekend. They said Tuesday morning what they could have easily said Sunday afternoon - that it simply isn't known what, if any kind of illegal street drugs, Ginter took before she died, and that an autopsy and toxicology tests hadn't been conducted. The police faced some criticism at Tuesday's press conference, and the online posters on various media sites have targeted the usual suspects for their heapings of blame: the government for not legalizing drugs; unscrupulous drug dealers who don't engage in sufficient quality control programs; the schools, the health-care system, and even capitalism got a good going over for their many failings. But the people who make, push, and use illegal drugs don't care. They'll choose to keep on doing what they do, and more candlelight vigils, conducted soberly or not, will illuminate the sad end to wasted lives. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom