Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jan 1999 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer (PA) Contact: http://www.phillynews.com/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Author: Meredith Fischer INTERNET DRUG SCARE NOT AN ISOLATED CASE A woman's stepson and his friends bought DXM via computer. They also were hospitalized. Mary Ellen Mellor kept it quiet. As long as no one knew, she and the rest of the family hoped the problem would go away. But it didn't. Now, Mellor's 16-year-old stepson is undergoing drug rehabilitation, and the incident that first signaled his later drug problems has come rushing back. Mellor's stepson overdosed on dextromethorphan, or DXM, in October 1997, when he was 15. "He bought it from the computer. He plugged in his address and paid for it with a money order that he and his friends got from Wawa," Mellor said. "It is scary how easy it is." The drug arrived a few days later in a brown wrapper. The story is not a new one. Last week, four girls from Conestoga High School in Berwyn were sickened by the same legal drug that Mellor's stepson and three friends from Great Valley High School in nearby Malvern mixed with milk to get high one night in his Chester County home. Like the teens involved in last week's incident, they had to be rushed to Paoli Memorial Hospital, where they were treated for symptoms including shortness of breath and rapid heartbeat. In both cases, large quantities of DXM -- typically sold to pharmaceutical companies for use in over-the-counter cough syrups -- had been purchased from underground merchandisers who market this drug and others on the Internet. Mellor said her stepson, whose name is being withheld by The Inquirer, and his friends pooled $160 to purchase 50 grams of DXM from a North Carolina company that advertised on the Internet. The four girls -- a 16-year-old from Berwyn and three 15-year-olds from Wayne, Devon and Radnor -- got the white powdery substance from two male students, ages 15 and 16, from Berwyn, who purchased 50 grams for $100 from an Ohio company that also advertises on the Internet, authorities said. The 1997 incident was not reported to local police, but Tredyffrin police are investigating the incident last week. Last week, federal authorities began investigating the availability of DXM and the ease with which anyone can purchase it through the Internet. Yesterday, Larry McElynn, a special agent with the Philadelphia office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said the DEA would be expanding its investigation to probe the source of the drug. "We have people who are not in a legitimate industry selling this stuff," McElynn said. "There are pirates on the Net with access to large amounts of[DXM], and we need to find out where they are getting it from." More than a half-dozen merchandisers market DXM over the Internet. Company names, addresses, and phone numbers are listed on one Web site, along with the quantities of DXM available and the prices. For $125, a customer can purchase 50 grams of DXM from a seller based in Greensboro, N.C. For $1,000, this same company says it will sell a kilogram of the drug within 24 hours. Mellor was not sure if this was the same North Carolina company her son purchased his DXM from. Such availability of large amounts worries federal drug agents. "We don't think[the merchandisers]are violating the laws we enforce," McElynn said. "But there could be some FDA[Food and Drug Administration]regulations they may be violating, and there could be the issue of mail fraud, since they are using the U.S. Postal Service to sell this stuff. That is why we are looking into this." Mellor, a nurse at Mercy Community Hospital in Haverford, said she was shocked by the ease with which her stepson was able to purchase DXM. "Who would have thought that for $160 they could get this stuff sent to them in the mail?" Mellor said. The substance, Mellor later learned, arrived in an unlabeled canister filled with white pow der that resembled baking powder. "It looked like one of those small plastic cups that hospitals use for urine samples," Mellor said. "Parents need to know that it is very easy for their children to get hold of this stuff and other drugs. It's sad that we often don't know what they are doing until they overdose and it is too late." When taken in large quantities, DXM can cause stomach pain, cramping, dizziness and vomiting, and may result in coma and brain damage. Those touting its use as a recreational drug claim it gives the feeling of being drunk and high at the same time. Substance abuse counselors and police officers said the recent incidents are worrisome. "Kids can go out on the Internet and get whatever they want," said Dr. Bonnie Heine, who works at Today Inc., a drug treatment center for adolescents in Newtown, Bucks County. "Nobody is minding the store." Although most of the younger adults who come to the facility are addicted to heroin and other illegal substances, Heine said the availability of legal drugs in large doses makes the Internet a dangerous tool for those looking to experiment. Police Officer Michael Cullin, who manages the Lower Merion Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program, said substances once available only through magazines are being sold in bulk on the Internet. "There's magic mushroom, herbal ecstasy, you name it," Cullin said. "It used to be that you had to worry about kids getting into the sex part on the Internet, now you have to worry about the drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck