Pubdate: Mon, 2 Feb 2004 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2004 Daily News, L.P. Contact: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/295 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CRYSTAL METH'S CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER Surging use of crystal methamphetamine, a cheaply made and highly addictive drug, threatens to worsen the AIDS epidemic in New York City and become a new source of tragedy for the gay community. It's past time for an all-out crackdown. The city's gay leaders must lead the fight, as they've done so often before in the never-ending battle against AIDS and HIV, the virus that causes the disease. This time their challenge is to stigmatize crystal meth, making its use a betrayal of the community. The police and public health authorities must pitch in. Crystal meth's popularity among some gay club- and partygoers and its deadly dangers are beginning to dawn on the city, thanks to a clarion call issued by AIDS activist Peter Staley. A former crystal meth user, Staley generously spent $6,000 of his own money to buy six ads on Chelsea phone booths where a man's muscled torso is the attention-grabber for the message, "Buy crystal, get HIV free." Methamphetamine, a stimulant that can be produced in home labs, can be smoked, snorted, ingested orally or injected. Like amphetamine, its parent drug, it feeds the brain the pleasure-producing chemical dopamine while destroying dopamine receptors, rendering the body unable to produce its own. Health professionals compare its addictive potential to that of crack or heroin. The drug decreases inhibitions and sets the stage for unsafe sexual behavior. It's often used in clubs or private parties, and health professionals and advocates say the drug is cutting a virulent swath through the gay community. In 2002, a hotline run by the Gay Men's Health Crisis rarely received a call about crystal meth. Now, it averages five daily. The Health Department estimates that 15% to 20% of the white men who have sex with men use amphetamines at some time. HIV-positive men are twice as likely to use the drug as HIV-negative men. AIDS deaths among gay men in the city dropped to 2,400 two years ago, from 8,000 in 1994, thanks to drug therapies and changes in behavior, including practicing safe sex. That number has got to fall even further. For that to happen, crystal meth must be banished. Don't let them hide The state Commission on Judicial Conduct is holding hearings into allegations that Surrogate Judge Michael Feinberg let a pal loot the estates of dead Brooklynites. The panel has been taking testimony and examining evidence. But you wouldn't know that. How could you when state law requires the commission to operate in secrecy? What's been happening behind those closed doors is an outrage that proves why the Legislature must open judicial disciplinary hearings. Hidden from view, Feinberg or his lawyer tried to pull a fast one that would have been impossible in a public proceeding. Feinberg rounded up a number of fellow jurists to testify to his good character. He also stated, in some form or fashion, that Brooklyn Appellate Division Presiding Justice Gail Prudenti would be willing to join the chorus attesting to his fine human qualities. But it turns out that Prudenti, one of the state's most powerful judges, had no such intention, according to her office. This all comes to light only because of persistent inquiries by Daily News reporter Larry Cohler-Esses and other journalists. Were it not for their questions, the commission might well have accepted Feinberg's claim about Prudenti at face value and, thanks to its secrecy, no one would have been the wiser. The judicial conduct panel must now focus on whether Feinberg and/or his lawyer was deliberately misleading. If so, that should be a career ender for the guilty. And the Legislature must make judicial disciplinary hearings public. For more than a quarter-century, the commission has called for open hearings. The only obstacle has been the judges. They have no problem exposing regular folks to public scrutiny in their courtrooms but scurry from the light when it's trained on them. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom