Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jul 2001
Source: Deseret News (UT)
Copyright: 2001 Deseret News Publishing Corp.
Contact:  http://www.desnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124
Author:  Pat Reavy - Deseret News staff writer
Note: With files from the Associated Press

RAVE DRUG A WORRY FOR VETS

Ketamine's Vogue Makes Vet Clinics A Target Of Dealers

Ecstasy and GHB have been known for some time as the club drugs of choice 
in the underground rave scene. But narcotics agents say another drug is 
making a fast rise in popularity, and law enforcement officers and 
veterinarians are concerned.

Ketamine, also known as "Special K" or "Vitamin K," is commonly used in 
animal clinics as an anesthetic for domestic and farm animals. But it's 
also being smoked, snorted, injected and ingested at underground rave parties.

The increase in ketamine's popularity has vet clinics across the nation 
worried about becoming the targets of drug dealers and users.

A man was arrested in Sandy June 17 after stealing ketamine and other drugs 
from the Alta Veterinary Clinic, 700 E. 8052 South.

The armed man threatened employees of the clinic and demanded drugs before 
firing several rounds into a medicine cabinet. The man grabbed what police 
described as large quantities of drugs and left. He was tracked down and 
arrested by Sandy and Midvale police.

The White Pine Veterinary Clinic in Park City had ketamine stolen from its 
facility several weeks ago.

In February, ketamine was stolen from the Ribbonwood Animal Hospital in 
Orem after thieves crawled through an open window.

Salt Lake County sheriff's detectives have investigated at least three 
cases of stolen ketamine in their jurisdiction in the past year, Sgt. 
Darren Carr said.

Similar incidents of vet clinic robberies are being reported across the nation.

In Arvada, Colo., thieves looking for ketamine broke into two animal 
clinics in one night. In Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, thieves 
posing as vet clinic workers sought to "borrow" vials of ketamine from 
other clinics.

"The whole veterinarian community is scared. I'm a prisoner in my own 
office," said Philadelphia veterinarian Raj Khare, 66, who was robbed in June.

"It's been abused for a number of years, but with the club scene, it's 
becoming more popular," said Jude McKenna, a special agent with the Drug 
Enforcement Administration in Philadelphia.

In Utah, ketamine "is not considered a significant threat at this time," 
DEA Resident Agent-In-Charge Barry Jamison said.

But Salt Lake County narcotics agents said they've been monitoring the 
drug's growth in popularity, especially in the rave community, for more 
than a year.

In addition to being used on animals, ketamine is used by doctors at 
Primary Children's Medical Center, hospital pharmacist Karla Snow said. It 
is used with other drugs, such as Versed, as a way to sedate young children 
or help relieve some of their anxieties before a procedure such as 
bone-marrow aspiration or radiation treatment, she said.

But by the time patients reach their teens, the drug is not used much. The 
drug has more side effects in adults than it does in children, said Barbara 
Crouch, director of the Utah Poison Control Center.

Ketamine can increase a person's blood pressure and heart rate, Crouch 
said. The drug can result in permanent brain damage. It can also cause 
convulsions -- especially when taken in large doses -- and vomiting, when 
mixed with alcohol.

Like GHB, ketamine is also known as a date-rape drug. It can induce a 
comalike state in humans. It is generally found in vet clinics in a liquid 
form and is boiled by drug users into a powder. Similar to PCP, ketamine 
has a hallucinogenic effect sought by drug users.

Hallucinating is one of ketamine's most dangerous side effects, Crouch 
said. It causes irrational behavior in people and gives them a sense of 
invulnerability, she said. That feeling can make people do stupid things, 
such as stand in front of a train, Crouch said.

Some juveniles have reported tripping out on ketamine and seeing snakes 
climb walls, Snow said. Others simply get delirious and start yelling and 
screaming and don't even realize they're doing it, she said.

Ketamine is extremely addictive, said Porter Law, who used to be in charge 
of purchasing drugs for Cottonwood Animal Hospital. "I don't know why 
anyone would want to ingest it intentionally."

Although the popularity of ketamine has surged over the past few years, 
it's not the first time it has been considered a fad drug. In 1991, the 
Deseret News reported ketamine was becoming the trendy drug of the New York 
nightclub scene.

Last year, Utah lawmakers approved HB77, adding both ketamine and GHB to 
the controlled-substance list. That means only veterinarians and medical 
personnel are allowed to legally possess ketamine.

Possession of ketamine is a third-degree felony punishable by up to 5 years 
in prison.
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MAP posted-by: Beth