Pubdate: Wed, 22 May 2002
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2002 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Christine Hanley and Liz F. Kay, Times Staff Writers
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)

PROM-NIGHT HIGH ENDS IN DEATH

Tragedy: A Foothill High School Senior Who Took Ecstasy With Alcohol 
Is Taken Off Life Support.

Cathy Isford wore a white, strapless dress and her dark, red hair up 
in a twist for Foothill High School's senior prom Saturday. To cap 
the special evening, she told her sister, she would take Ecstasy "one 
more time."

On Tuesday, Isford lay in the intensive-care unit of a Santa Ana 
hospital, her dress replaced with a blue medical gown. The mixture of 
Ecstasy and alcohol sent her into a coma, the result of what medical 
experts and educators describe as a frightening rite of passage 
during prom season.

Isford's family, friends and fiance cradled the 18-year-old in their 
arms as doctors at Western Medical Center disconnected the 
life-support system that had kept her breathing for two days. The 
agonizing decision, her mother said, was made after doctors told her 
Isford was brain-dead. "She was doing Ecstasy to make the event 
special," Pat Isford, 48, said hours after her youngest child was 
pronounced dead. "It just makes you realize that life's too short to 
waste on so-called whims of fun."

Cathy Isford had experimented with Ecstasy when she was younger, but 
her family believed she had stopped about two years ago, after 
meeting Rene Rojas, 26.

The couple was engaged to marry next spring. Although they had met at 
a rave party in San Bernardino, they stopped going to them because of 
the widespread use of drugs, family members said.

Isford planned to attend Cal State Fullerton and earn a teaching 
degree. She was saving for college and her wedding by working in the 
child-care center at a Linda Evans Fitness Center and as a 
receptionist at her sister's car refurbishing business in Lake Forest.

A popular student, she was known for her paintings and drawings. As 
an aide in the principal's office, she made school-wide 
public-address announcements. In recent months, she had begun 
volunteering as a teacher's aide at a nearby elementary school

The week before the prom, she told several people that she planned to 
take Ecstasy once more. Isford told her sister Star that she was 
going to "roll one last time." Star and brother Josh both said they 
warned her to be careful.

"She wanted to have the best possible time she could have," Josh 
Isford said. "I just said, 'Be careful and have a good time. It's 
supposed to be one of the greatest nights of your life.'"

Pictures taken at the prom show Isford and her fiance smiling and 
dancing at Joe's Garage, a Tustin auto museum where Foothill High 
School held its Knight Out on the Town prom.

Afterward, the couple headed to an Embassy Suites hotel room in Santa 
Ana for a party, Star Isford said, based on accounts from friends who 
were in the room. Isford took two pills, mixing them with wine, beer 
and rum, her sister said. She began complaining of a terrible 
headache about an hour later. About 4 a.m., she collapsed in her 
boyfriend's arms, Star Isford said, and her last words were, "My head 
hurts really bad."

Complete autopsy results are not expected for weeks.

Ecstasy, known as methylene dioxymethamphetamine or MDMA, is a 
stimulant and hallucinogen that induces a high lasting up to six 
hours. It can cause dramatic changes in heart rate and blood pressure 
and lead to dehydration. It also has been shown to cause lasting 
changes in the brain's chemical systems that control mood and memory.

Even as Isford's relatives and friends grieved, they hoped that her 
death would warn other teenagers.

"The reality is that this is happening in America more than parents 
would ever want to admit," said Tommy Tracy, 20, one of the many 
friends who gathered at the family's home in Tustin. "You don't 
realize it until it slaps you in the face."

Drugs like Ecstasy have become more widely used partly because teens 
can get high while appearing lucid. A federal study found that from 
1996 to 2000, emergency-room visits for Ecstasy rose nationwide from 
319 to 4,511.

"A lot of kids are going to get loaded that don't usually," said Mike 
Darnold, director of community outreach for Positive Action Center, a 
drug treatment center at Chapman Medical Center in Orange. Schools 
across Southern California hold seminars for parents and students 
about the dangerous consequences of drug and alcohol use at prom.

Foothill High Principal Al Marzilli said such presentations were held 
before Saturday night. At the prom itself, 30 to 40 adult chaperones 
helped to check purses and coats and search limousines for drugs and 
alcohol. Marzilli shook hands with students as they arrived and left, 
looking for any signs of intoxication. He remembers greeting Isford 
and being introduced to her finance but said he saw nothing unusual.

"It's really upsetting," he said. "You take all the precautions in 
the world and do everything you can. And then something like this 
happens. There just are no words."
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