Pubdate: Fri, 08 Mar 2002
Source: Chesterton Tribune (IN)
Copyright: 2002 Chesterton Tribune
Contact:  http://chestertontribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1933
Author: Kevin Nevers
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

KIDS LEARNING ABOUT THE LATEST DRUGS ON THE INTERNET

Kids may not be able to find Europe on the map, tell you who their 
congressman is, or distinguish between the Declaration of Independence and 
the U.S. Constitution. But in one area of their young lives they're 
demonstrating rare industry and ingenuity.

In their choice, pursuit, and ingestion of drugs.

The old standbys still have a niche in the market, of course: marijuana, 
cocaine, and-as the overdose death March 3 of a former Chesterton High 
School student reveals only too grimly-heroin.

Yet kids today are experimenting with drugs which few parents have ever 
heard of. Homemade drugs, designer drugs, prescription drugs, even 
perfectly legal over-the-counter drugs.

As Paul Ulrich, an agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration, told his 
colleagues in the Community Action Drug Coalition at its monthly meeting 
Wednesday, it's difficult to stay ahead of the curve when it comes to the 
latest fads in the drug subculture.

Difficult, unless you spend hours surfing the Internet, where the kids 
themselves have created websites devoted to the next great high. These 
sites feature tips on where to obtain a particular drug and how to ingest 
it, information on the duration of its effect and the likelihood of side 
effects, first-hand blow-by-blow accounts of good trips and bad ones, and 
even answers to FAQs.

Thus, in one website reviewed by the Chesterton Tribune, a kid describes 
his first use of Coricidin HBP Cough & Cold tablets, an over-the-counter 
medication dubbed "Triple C" and capable in large doses of producing an 
hallucinogenic effect similar to that caused by LSD:

I read up a little bit on . . . Coricidin pills to find out what I was 
getting myself into. The sites I went to advised me to take only 8 of the 
special non-acetaminophen tablets. So I did just that. . . . Lolling my 
head from side to side to the beat of non-existing music was very relaxing. 
I stood up and walked around a bit. I felt like a chicken, my walking was 
very abnormal. I collapsed on the couch and just talked to myself, trying 
to make sense out of my words.

In a different website, on the other hand, a "somewhat experienced 
Coricidin user" expresses these concerns about his heavy use:

1. Extreme Depression, I think it was extreme because of other going on and 
it just magnifies it.

2. Extreme Paranoia, I think this is some what normal but it was pretty 
serious . . . . I thought my mom and dad were trying to make me crazy . . . 
. I thought my neighbors were watching me (still don't know if that ones 
false haha) . . . .

3. In silence I usually hear music very clearly even if I'm off the drug 
its somewhat faint though (I think its normal to hear music clearly on the 
drug).

Coricidin-which contains dextromethorphan, an ingredient related to 
morphine-has proved so popular a drug that Bob Taylor, coordinator of the 
Porter County Drug Task Force, is asking pharmacists to pull it from their 
shelves and sell it behind the counter at a customer's request only. Many 
have done so, he said, while those who haven't are likely to see their 
stock of Coricidin plundered by shoplifters.

The Smorgasbord

Kids who prefer other highs, meanwhile, have plenty of choices:

*Ritalin. A stimulant commonly prescribed in the treatment of Attention 
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Ritalin in large doses produces a range of 
effects, from euphoria and agitation to hallucinations and paranoia. Kids 
have taken to breaking into schools to get at the supplies of Ritalin 
stored in nurses' offices, said Ulrich. "It's a black market drug on the 
street now."

*Ecstasy. A stimulant and hallucinogen extremely popular in the rave 
subculture-frenzied dancing, psychedelic light shows, lousy music-3,4- 
methylenedioxymeth-amphetamine or MDMA has a variety of side effects beyond 
the desired ones of euphoria and relaxation, including nausea, tremors, 
anxiety, and seizures. "We're gaining ground on traditional drug use," 
noted Ulrich, "but Ecstasy is taking off."

*GHB/GBH. An anaesthetic also popular in the club scene, 
gammahydroxybutrate or "grievous bodily harm" slows the heartbeat and 
lowers blood pressure. It also induces vomiting, dizziness, and drowsiness.

*BZP and TFMPP. Neither benzylpiperazine nor 
triflouromethylphenylpiperazine is listed under the Controlled Substances 
Act, each is currently legal, and both are being sold as Ecstasy. BZP and 
TFMPP are manufactured legally in India and may be purchased over the 
Internet from bulk chemical supply stores in the U.S.

*OxyContin. A time-released form of the opium derivative oxycodone-the same 
active ingredient in Percodan and Percocet-OxyContin has become the loot of 
choice of well-organized burglary rings which target pharmacies, said Alex 
Rodriguez, another agent with DEA.

*Rohypnol. The brand name of the tranquilizer flunitrazepam and known as 
Roofies on the street, Rohypnol is the latest date-rape drug. Slipped into 
the drink of an unsuspecting woman, it produces amnesia, muscle relaxation, 
and sedation lasting a couple of hours.

Those not content to buy their favorite drug or steal it can also make it, 
and in August 2001 the Porter County Drug Task Force busted a 
methamphetamine lab in Portage, the first such lab confirmed in the county. 
Although the recipe is easily available on the Internet, the manufacture of 
methamphetamine is a dangerous business since it utilizes a number of 
flammable, explosive, and other hazardous "precursor materials": lye, paint 
thinner, and anhydrous ammonia among them.

But, Rodriguez said, because the purchase of such items in quantity may 
attract the notice of an alert clerk in a hardware store, methamphetamine 
cooks have taken to sending addicts in their place to steal the precursor 
materials. "Most of these kids are shoplifters."

Most of these kids are also pretty clever. In the cat-and-mouse game which 
law enforcement plays with drug traffickers and their customers, police are 
usually a step or two behind, especially on the East and West coasts where 
the latest fads usually hit first. "If you watch the flow of drugs," Taylor 
told the Tribune today, "they get to the Midwest later. But we've still got 
to play catch-up."

The Internet has made catch-up all the more difficult. Websites devoted to 
drugs are no more illegal than those devoted to pornography or bomb-making, 
Taylor said, and they spread the word about the next thing in highs 
rapidly, efficiently, and anonymously.
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MAP posted-by: Alex