Pubdate: Thu, 19 Oct 2006
Source: USA Today (US)
Copyright: 2006 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc
Contact:  http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/index.htm
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466
Author: Donna Leinwand, USA Today

DEA WARNS OF SOFT DRINK-COUGH SYRUP MIX

When San Diego Chargers defensive back Terrence Kiel was charged last 
month with illegally shipping cases of prescription cough syrup back 
home to East Texas, it cast a spotlight on a drug trend authorities 
say is spreading throughout the South and being celebrated in rap songs.

In a statement announcing Kiel's arrest Sept. 26, the Drug 
Enforcement Administration cited the rising popularity of a 
concoction that includes codeine-laced syrup mixed with a soft drink 
or sports drink. Such cocktails -- known as "Lean," "Syrup," 
"Sizzurp" and "Purple Drank" -- were popularized in rap mixes in the 
late 1990s by Robert Earl Davis Jr., a Houston disc jockey known as DJ Screw.

Since then, some teens and young adults in East Texas and beyond have 
been getting high on drinks in which the key ingredient is a 
prescription cough suppressant that contains the opiate codeine. DEA 
Special Agent Doug Coleman, who tracks the drug from the agency's 
headquarters in Arlington, Va., says users typically mix an ounce of 
the syrup with Sprite, a sports drink or a regional soft drink called 
Big Red, then plop in a Jolly Rancher candy and pour it over ice. The 
opiate produces a feeling of euphoria and causes motor skill 
impairment that makes users move slowly or lean over.

The scope of cough syrup abuse across the nation is unclear because 
national drug surveys do not ask about it specifically. However, 
police, federal drug agents and public health analysts from Texas to 
Florida say the abuse and illegal sale of codeine syrup are rising 
and are part of the much larger problem of prescription drug abuse.

In 2004, 8.3% of Texas secondary school students reported having 
taken enough codeine syrup to get high, according to a survey by the 
University of Texas.

The misuse of prescription syrups is "a huge trend. We've seen more 
of it in the last few years than we've ever seen before," Coleman 
says. "We see a lot of kids getting hold of it" by ordering from 
online pharmacies that accept unverified prescriptions and identification.

DEA agents say the demand for illicit syrup has sent its price 
soaring. Syrup that typically sells for $12 a pint that is stolen or 
obtained illegally from pharmacies and warehouses often is sold to 
street dealers for about $300 a pint, says Richard Sanders, a DEA 
agent in Tyler, Texas. He says East Texas dealers then sell it by the 
ounce to users for $40-$85 -- or $640-$1,360 a pint.

The DEA's largest busts involving syrup have been in Texas and 
Florida, but it is turning up across the South. In August, police in 
Natchez, Miss., found several bottles of illicit syrup in countywide 
drug raids, and police in Alexandria, La., seized 15 1-pint bottles 
from a 48-year-old man.

Overdosing on prescription syrup is potentially fatal, but it's 
unclear how many people have died drinking such concoctions. Too much 
codeine, which is produced from morphine, can depress the central 
nervous system and stop the heart and lungs, Coleman says. "The 
misconception is that prescription drugs are OK because they are 
medicine," he says. "But if you're taking 25 times the recommended 
dosage, it's very dangerous."

In November 2000, DJ Screw, the innovator of rap mixes that glorified 
syrup drinks, died of a codeine overdose. His re-mixed and 
slowed-down rap songs reflected the narcotic effects of syrup, says 
Rolling Stone executive editor Joe Levy.

Since DJ Screw's death, others have extolled syrup drinks in their 
raps and mixes. Three 6 Mafia, an Oscar-winning hip-hop group, 
recently had a hit song called Sippin' on the Syrup. "Here in 
Houston, it went hand in hand with a very innovative form of hip-hop 
music called 'screw music,' " after DJ Screw, says Ron Peters, 
assistant professor of behavioral sciences at the University of Texas 
Health Science Center.

"I'd be surprised if the majority of high school hip-hop fans don't 
know what syrup is," Levy says. "But it doesn't mean they are using it."

Syrup drinks appeared in Pensacola, Fla., in 1999 as a social drink 
among drug dealers, says Pensacola police Sgt. Stephen Bauer. 
Pensacola's narcotics unit recently concluded a wiretap investigation 
in which cocaine and marijuana dealers routinely mentioned syrup in 
recorded conversations, Bauer says.

In Louisiana, teens are using syrup in the Lafayette and Lake Charles 
areas, says Kristen Meyer of the state Department of Health and 
Hospitals. "It's new on everyone's radar," she says.

Trafficking of syrup is rising in Texas, says Special Agent Tim 
Stover of the DEA's Fort Worth office. Dealers in Dallas, Fort Worth 
and Houston have bought pints from corrupt pharmacy owners for cash, he says.

In Houston, seven pharmacists and a doctor were convicted last summer 
of illegally diverting more than 2,500 gallons of narcotic cough 
syrup by creating and filling hundreds of phony prescriptions.

In August, a federal grand jury in Oakland indicted the directors of 
a non-profit organization set up to distribute medicine in Nigeria. 
They allegedly used the group to divert prescription drugs, including 
syrup, to dealers and users.

Despite crackdowns by police, prescription syrup is a popular illicit 
drug in Tyler, where Kiel's packages were to have been sent. Kiel, 
who grew up in nearby Lufkin, told DEA agents he shipped the syrup to 
help out a cousin, says Bob Grimes, Kiel's attorney. The cousin has 
not been identified; no others have been charged.

Court papers say DEA agents were told of Kiel's shipment by FedEx 
managers who inspected a package the player had dropped off and found 
15 pints of syrup. Kiel was arrested after he took a second box of 
syrup to FedEx. DEA agents found more syrup in his garage, Special 
Agent Dan Simmons says. Kiel pleaded not guilty to five felony 
charges. He could face up to five years in prison if convicted.
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