Pubdate: Sat, 08 Aug 199 Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com Author: James Rougvie, Gordon Currie and Alastair Dalton CLUB CULTURE CLAIMS A NEW VICTIM A TEENAGE girl lost her fight for life yesterday, three days after taking ecstasy at a friend's birthday party. The parents of 18-year-old Julia Dawes took the decision to switch her life-support machine off after a scan confirmed specialists' fears that her brain was dead. The fitness instructor's and subsequent death bore similarities to the circumstances of Leah Betts's death in 1995, who died at her 18th birthday celebration at the family home. Miss Betts's father, Paul, who has campaigned to raise drugs awareness last night renewed his appeal to parents to become fully informed of the potential risks and speak openly with their children. "Young people are being sold a wonderful marketing job by the people peddling them drugs, and unless they are told the other side of the story they will continue to feel they are immortal. "It is another unnecessary tragedy and one that we always wished we would never hear of again," said Mr Betts. Yesterday Miss Dawes's uncle, Kenneth, spoke of the family's devastation adding that his brother had warned his niece not to take illegal substances. Mr Dawes, who said his brother's family had moved to Scotland from Thanet in Kent, said: "It is absolutely horrendous and a tragedy, She has been allergic to medicine since she was young and her father always told her never to take anything. We don't believe she had ever done this before and that this was the first time she had taken drugs. She more or less died in her dad's arms on the Sunday morning." However, a docor said yesterday that there was unlikely to be a connection between her death and her allergies to other drugs. Dr Brian Keighley, a GP in Balfron in the Forth Valley, said: "The message is that anyone who is taking an illicit substance is taking a risk and we know that there have been a number of deaths, particularly in the rave scene, connected to ecstasy." Miss Dawes's uncle added that her family were told on Sunday by specialists that she was brain dead, but they had kept a constant vigil by her bedside in the hope that she might recover. Yesterday her devoutly religious parents, Jacqueline and Alan, accepted that she was dead. Her boyfriend of four months, Mark Reilly, 21, a British international skier whom friends believed she was to marry, was also at her bedside. Miss Dawes was the latest victim of ecstasy which has swept the club scene in the past decade. There have been at least 60 ecstasy-related deaths in the UK since 1989. Yesterday it was claimed that dealers were fighting for the market in Perth and Tayside where police confirmed that the price of ecstasy had fallen fromn A315 to A310. Police figures also show seizures of ecstasy rose significantly in the last 12 months with 871 tablets seized throughout the force area, approximately 13 per cent up on the previous year's figure of 772. Phyllis Woodlock, 35, of New Stevenston, Lanarkshire, wept when she learned that Miss Dawes had died. Last year her son, Andrew Woodlock, 13, became the youngest ecstasy-related death in Britain. She has been campaigning with Mr Betts to raise awareness. She said: "They are dicing with death. They have got to get away from thinking that it's easy to take a bad tablet." Miss Dawes is believed to have suffered irreversible brain damage after taking two tablets during an evening out on Saturday to celebrate the 24th birthday of Susan McArthur at the Ice Factory nightclub in Perth. Friends said that Miss Dawes seemed fine when they parted company early on Sunday morning. However, her parents later found her unconscious at their home in Redgorton in Perthshre. She was taken to Perth Royal Infirmary where she died yesterday. Mr and Mrs Dawes wore too upset to speak of her death, but issued a statement through their lawyer. It said: "Mr and Mrs Dawes and their son Jonathan, are deeply grieved as a result of the events of the last few days. They wish time to be alone as a family, to come to terms with the loss of Julia." Miss Dawes was a former pupil of Morrisons Academy in Crieff, which she attended along with her brother Jonathan, 16. She recently completed an HND course in business studies at Perth college and had joined the family business at her parents' Hanover's Health Club. Yesterday, John Brydon, the owner of The Ice Factory was reported to be on holiday in Majorca. A spokesman for the nightclub declined to make any comment on the weekend's events. The procurator-fiscal at Perth has confirmed that four people have been arrested and charged with drugs offences and have been released from custody while police investigations continue. A spokesman for Tayside Police said a report on the circumstances surrounding Miss Dawes's death had been sent to the procurator-fiscal. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett