Pubdate: Fri, 07 Aug 2015 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2015 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 IN TRAGIC TEEN OD, THERE'S JUST NO ONE ELSE TO BLAME When someone dies, it's common for loved ones to shake a fist at whatever deity they believe in and ask "why?" In the U.S. of A., it's almost as common to look for someone to blame. And then file a lawsuit. Any death of a vibrant young person is a tragedy. When it's absolutely avoidable, such as a drug overdose, even more so. But barring gross negligence, it adds insult to injury to expect others to take responsibility for a death an autopsy report attributes to an overdose of illegal hallucinogenics - especially those who tried to save her life. Especially when the girl herself purchased the drugs more than a month prior. Yet Hannah Bruch's estate has cast a wide net of alleged culpability for the 14-yearold girl's fatal MDMA overdose at a 2013 concert at Expo New Mexico, naming 10 defendants including the state, three event co-promoters, security and ambulance companies, a hospital and paramedics. According to a police report, Bruch bought the drug from a dealer in June, divided about $100 worth of it among three girls, kept the largest share, told the other girls the drug "is more intense than what they had taken the last time," and on the August night of the foam party ignored the venue's 16-year-old age requirement and took five "hits" of the drug in crystalline form, called "shards." In addition, text messages on the girl's phone and testimony from her friends show she had used MDMA before, along with cocaine, marijuana, psychedelic mushrooms and alcohol. That pattern and end result are every parent's nightmare. In America you can file a lawsuit apportioning blame to anyone, and there's little wonder Bruch's family is asking the court to decide who bears responsibility for their tragic loss. Yet in the wake of Bruch's death the state ended the questionable practice of hosting such all-ages electronic music shows, a smart call since it failed to adequately enforce the age limit and segregate young teens from alcohol-consuming adults in a wild setting of pounding music and pulsing lights. The police report shows the girl was in drug trouble long before the "Foam Wonderland" show and purchased what caused her death long before heading to Expo. As horrible as Bruch's death was, expecting everyone there to have "the appropriate training for the circumstances" is expecting too much. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom