Source: Telegraph, The (UK) Contact: Sun, 06 Sep 1998 Author: Jacqui Thornton Pubdate: 6 September 1998 STORES USE ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT TO STOP DRUG ABUSE BRANCHES of Woolworths have installed ultraviolet lights in their lavatories to make it difficult for drug addicts to see their veins after equipment for injecting heroin and amphetamines was found in the toilets. The lights were installed in Woolworths branches in Coventry and Plymouth, and other shopkeepers in Devon, including department stores and toy shops, have contacted police after finding drug equipment. Mike McGann, a spokesman for Woolworths, said that although customers find the lighting "a bit weird", they are understanding. "It's a minor inconvenience to customers, a bit like walking into a darkroom," he said. "On two or three occasions used syringes were found in the toilets in Plymouth. Bearing in mind our customers are mothers and young children, you can imagine how they reacted. The lights have stopped the problem overnight. To this day we have had no further trouble, and at Coventry we have even gone back to standard lights." Det Con Mike Bradley, Plymouth's drugs liaison officer, said the problem had grown in shops as clubs enforced tougher anti-drugs policies. There are 1,000 addicts registered in Plymouth, and he said many now inject themselves before they enter clubs. Shop lavatories had been an obvious option. The police licensing department are encouraging other premises to introduce the lighting. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan