Pubdate: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 Source: Scotland on Sunday Contact: 20 Author: Stephen Fraser, North-East Correspondent CITY OF FALLEN ANGELS New trend emerges in drug-related deaths as Grampian heroin epidemic hits teenagers from affluent homes Insert: Heroin seizures by Grampian Police 1992: 64kg; 1993: 441kg; 1994: 593kg; 1995: 705kg; 1996: 5,661 kg The three might have been friends in different circumstances. Vicki Nash, Malcolm Aslen and Elaine Barclay had a lot in common. They were all bright, intelligent youngsters, from good middle-class homes in the prosperous rural hinterland surrounding Aberdeen. But pride over their children is not what unites the families now: their bond has been forged in the grief of seeing their offspring lost to heroin as the drug associated with the deprived housing estates of the central belt tightens its grip on the affluent North-east. While Neil Alsen, Malcolm's father, maintains his student son had successfully kicked a habit forged in his home streets of Cairnbulg, a village outside Fraserburgh, the police are still treating his death as "drugs-related". There is little doubt for Alan Barclay and his wife Ruth over what killed their 20-year-old daughter Elaine, found dead in a flat in an Aberdeen housing scheme frequented by drug-users the same night as 22-year-old Malcolm's corpse was discovered in his university accommodation. Test results will confirm what the couple already knew. She was an addict. So was 18-year-old Victoria Nash, daughter of a Liberal Democrat councillor from the middle-class suburb of Portlethen. After two years trying to offer her help, they had lost her to the addiction she should never break. There have now been six drug deaths in Grampian this year, a tally which is already showing sinister signs of beating 1997's toll of 28. "We are currently running at one death a week, which is an absolutely shocking figure," says Detective Inspector Alan Smith, head of the Grampian Drugs Squad and the man charged on an operational level with stemming the flow of heroin. "We have a massive problem with heroin which in its character is unique in Scotland." Drugs seizures by Grampian Police have soared in the last few years confirming Aberdeen's position as Soctland's new heroin capital. Part of the fascination of the heroin epidemic in and around Aberdeen is that its victims do not conform to the stereotype 'junkie' of popular myth, shooting up to escape the no-hope confines of poverty on a bleak housing estate. Instead the North-east victims tend to be from 'respectable' families, their only connection a taste for youthful rebellion which makes them prime target of the dealers looking for new customers and find rich pickings. At Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, consultant John Hiscox says: "Five years ago you were unlucky if you saw one heroin case a month. Now it is completely changed, and they happen evry other day." It was the death of Victoria Nash two months ago which dramatically brought home to the public what is now happening in Aberdeen. Barely three months after her death, her mother Mhairi is still angry to drive on a special trust she has set up demanding a drug rehabilitation facility. Addicts currently have to travel to Glasgow to find the nearest residential centre, and face a long wait for admittance unless they can pay for private care which will buy immediate attention. Like the Barclay family, from the outlying suburb of Newmacher, Nash laboured to try and get help for her daughter. Like Elaine, Victoria failed to complete a rehabilitation course then relapsed. "We have to accept the nature of addiction means that people will relapse and we must support both them and their families through this experience," says Nash. "But we don't. Instead society treats addicts like modern lepers. Victoria tried really hard to kick the habit, but then people would just destroy her self-confidence by treating her like rubbish." Nash sought help through Aberdeen Drugs Action, which is seeing an increasing number of young people, particularly women. Agency director Keith Patterson reports that of the 148 new contacts seeking help for heoin abuse in the second half of 1997, 60% were under 25, with two thirds of that number under 20 years old. Nash implicates changes in society for the pressures faced by her vulnerable daughter. "there were more children at her school than lived in the whole village in Argyll where I grew up. I used to go to dances where children, parents and grandparents would mingle together. "But because there has been a breakdown in communications between adults and children as they grow into teenagers, teenagers tend to stick together in large numbers when they go out at night." Aberdeen's oil-based prosperity also means teenagers are likely to have plenty of money to spend when they go into the night. Then the route to heroin addiction is the same, with a free sample from a dealer to hook the client. Smoking quickly becomes injecting in the search to achieve the buzz the first hit provides. Alan Smith knew Elaine Barclay and describes her story as typical. He says she would have been offered heroin for nothing as a marketing ploy. "Most first timers try it out by smoking rather than injecting in the belief they won't become addicited," he said. "It doesn't take long before they switch to injecting as they try and get the same buzz as they got the first time. It never comes." There are believed to be five or six large drugs suppliers in Aberdeen, who buy supplies from contacts in Glasgow, Liverpool and Yorkshire for around 1,000 an ounce. The drug is then sold on at four or five times that price, generating substantial profits. The local dealers, who tend to be addicts thenselves, are largely controlled by contacts in the south. "The set up is quite organised, and you have to say the dealers have been skillful in creating a market for their products by giving it our free or cheaply at first," added Smith. When dealers are convicted, the respite tends to be brief as others scramble to fill the lucrative vacuum left behind and meet the demand that has already been created. Alan Barclay and his wife Ruth have unwillingly picked up details of the drug trade over the last two years as they battled to help their daughter. He said: "You have to wonder what the government is doing to stop these people. We lost a loved daughter when she took heroin for the first time. Parents need to know the dangers that are possible. But what can you do? You can't lock your children up."