Source: Sunday Times (UK) Contact: Sun, 30 Aug 1998 Author: Paul Nuki and Edin Hamzic VIAGRA HITS THE CLUB SCENE THE DRUG dealer was in his mid-forties and introduced himself as Ian. "Want some poke?" he asked, producing a bottle of pills from his designer jacket. Viagra, the impotency drug, has hit the clubbing scene. "We are making a killing out of it," the dealer told a Sunday Times reporter. He handed over five Viagra pills - dubbed "poke" on the street - charging UKP40 each. "I would not take them with any other stimulants," he warned. Dealers say that Viagra's rejuvenating effects have become regarded by male and female clubbers as an ideal tonic to take at the end of a long night on the town. "The clubbing scene has always had a sexual edge and Viagra has a natural place in that," said Ian, who claimed to be making UKP5,000 a week through illicit sales of the drug. "Coke and Es get you sexed up, but they can also restrict orgasm. With Viagra you don't get that." Ian and his partner travel to America every few weeks to purchase batches of between 200 and 300 tablets which they sell in British bars and nightclubs with near-impunity. "It's without the legal hassle you get with selling coke and Es. With poke you get a slap on the wrist if you are caught. Any more than a couple of grams of coke and you are looking at a two-year stretch," said Ian. Last week a Sunday Times reporter approached six drug dealers in London and Bristol asking for supplies of Viagra. All admitted to selling the drug as well as cocaine, ecstasy, cannabis and amphetamines. The controversial medicine, which was linked last week to 69 deaths in America and has yet to be licensed in Britain, is being "marketed" to young clubbers as a safe and quasi-legal addition to their already wide repertoire of chemical stimulants. Medical experts fear that in some cases the blue diamond-shaped tablets are being taken as part of a potentially lethal cocktail of amphetamines and other illegal stimulants. Viagra is not the first medicine to be hijacked by drug dealers and, even when licensed in Britain later this year, experts fear that the black market could continue to develop. One drug squad officer, who asked not to be named, compared the threat the drug poses to the mayhem created by the sedative Valium in the late 1960s. Then dozens of chemists' shops and doctors' surgeries were ransacked by criminal gangs who sold pills illegally as "blues". The illicit use of Viagra has already been added to the remit of the government's "drug tsar", Keith Hellawell. The enforcement division of the Medicines Control Agency has also established a special "V-squad" to tackle the growing number of mail order companies and Internet firms now illegally selling the pills in Britain. In August the V-men notched up their first big bust when a stash of 90 pills with a street value of nearly UKP4,000 was discovered in a sex shop in Soho, London. On Friday an official warning was issued about a rogue mailshot that targeted pensioners with batches of up to 20 pills. Viagra is expected to be made generally available on prescription in Britain from next month. Experts say that Viagra is unlikely to be the last medicine hijacked by drug dealers. Spurred on by the huge commercial success of products such as Viagra and the anti-depressant Prozac, pharmaceutical companies are dedicating increasing portions of their research budgets to so-called "silver bullets", or lifestyle drugs. - --- Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson