Pubdate: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 Source: Sunday Telegraph (Australia) Contact: 14 Author: Bronwen Gora NIGHT MY DRINK WAS SPIKED POLICE are investigating an Oxford St nightclub after a woman allegedly had her drink drugged there. The incident has prompted warnings for women in inner-city clubs to beware of "date rape" attacks in which potent drugs such as Rohypnol are added to drinks. Linda Mitchell and her boyfriend, David Bowers, have vowed never to go near the inner-city club strip again after their last visit became a nightmare. Ms Mitchell, 23, is positive she was served a spiked drink. She believes that if her friends had not rescued her from a group of strangers, she could have been raped - or worse. "Anyone in my situation would have had the drink, because it was free. People would have thought: 'That's nice'," Ms Mitchell told The Sunday Telegraph. "And you feel like it's your fault - you feel guilty that you should have known better. "But when it's a bartender, they're in a position of authority and you're supposed to be able to trust them." Senior Constable Paul Cleavens, of Surry Hills police, confirmed the matter was under investigation. Ms Mitchell became separated from Mr Bowers and other friends in a fashionable Oxford St nightclub about 2am last Saturday. She went to the bar to see if she could spot them, and told the bartender she was waiting for someone. It was then that he gave her a yellow-coloured drink, she says. "It tasted a bit funny, but I drank it anyway," Ms Mitchell says. "I just thought: 'That's nice' - it was a free drink. "I couldn't taste any alcohol in it, But obviously there was something in it, because I began feeling very woozy and weird. "Then I ended up around the other side of the bar - I don't know how." When Mr Bowers eventually spotted Ms Mitchell surrounded by strangers, he realised something was wrong. "I thought: 'This is strange, what the hell's going on here?'," he says. Mr Bowers and a friend tried to coax Ms Mitchell away from the group of men, but with no success. Ms Mitchell has vague recollections of this occurring. "I was ignoring my friends, and I never do that," she says. Mr Bowers told police the group of men then turned the club's bouncers on him, but he was able to reason with one of them and explain that his girlfriend was in trouble. "Luckily, that one security guy went to Linda and told her not to hang out with the bartenders and to go with her friends," he says. About half an hour after the incident began, Mr Bowers, a 24-year-old store manager, was able to leave the bar with Ms Mitchell. By that time, she says, she could hardly speak and her legs had given way under her. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre spokesman Paul Dillon says these symptoms are typical of the sedative Rohypnol - a sleeping aid 10 times stronger than Valium. The drug is often added to a coloured drink to mask any cloudiness, Mr Dillon says. Although conscious, victims lose control of their actions. If the dose is strong enough, they eventually collapse. Mr Dillon says there have been several such incidents in Sydney, but many go unreported simply because of the nature of the drug. It also disappears rapidly out of the system, making it difficult for doctors to detect. "Quite often it has an amnesiac effect, and you just find yourself waking up somewhere weird," Mr Dillon says. Mr Bowers took Ms Mitchell home after the incident, but she soon became ill. She was dry retching and slipping in and out of consciousness. About 6am, he drove her to the Royal North Shore Hospital. She was admitted to the emergency ward, where doctors administered fluids and found traces of drugs in her system. After listening to the couple's story, the doctor urged them to go to the police. "I'll never go out in Oxford St again," Ms Mitchell says. "I don't feel safe going out any more. I was with my two best friends, but if I'd been by myself, I'm sure I would have been raped or killed. "I felt like I wasn't in control." Mr Bowers is still furious. You'd think that if you go to the bar to wait for somebody, you should be safe -but instead he gives you a strange drink." Ms Mitchell was reluctant to report the episode, but felt compelled to do so after realising it could happen to other women. She says police told her that drugs were rampant in Oxford St night-clubs, and the area was "out of control". "Basically, the police were saying to me: 'Just don't go there'," Ms Mitchell says. "The police said they want more people to come forward so they can get as much information as they can." In the past year, Oxford St has been the scene of shootings, stabbings, muggings and kidnappings. Fear has been running so high that concerned business owners are considering paying for private sec-urity guards to patrol the strip. The move was sparked by an increase in hold-ups by syringe-wielding thieves, robberies and bag snatches. One of the proponents of the security-guard scheme is local hotel licensee Aaron Elias, who was robbed of $10,000 when a man sprayed mace in his face and stole his bag of cash as he walked to the bank in August. Last month, a 21-year-old law clerk, Sinclair Bowers, was left unconscious and bleeding after being mugged near the Oxford St night-club strip. Two men have been charged over the murder of 18-year-old karate champion Chris Toumazis outside the Mr Goodbar nightclub, in Oxford St in May. The teenager, from Roselands, was shot on the street after leaving the club. A month after his murder, another customer of Mr Goodbar was stabbed four times while on the dance floor. The 30-year-old received minor stab wounds when a fight broke out as a band played to a crowd of 200 patrons in the early hours of the morning. A week later, the nightclub deemed security of such concern that it began screening patrons for weapons as they entered. In March this year, a man was kidnapped while walking near Oxford St and sexually assaulted. In what police believe was the first attack of its kind in NSW, the man was sexually assaulted over a two-day period in an underground chamber while his kidnappers filmed his torture. Oxford St has been targeted as a crime hotspot in "crime-mapping" data gathered by City Central police. Along with the George St cinema strip and Kings Cross, Oxford St remains a problem area, despite the two-month Operation CitySafe earlier this year. Police recently issued warnings to Christmas revellers to be wary of the criminal element moving into the city during the festive season and taking advantage of those having a good time. - --- Checked-by: derek rea