Pubdate: Sun, 18 Apr 2010
Source: Herald, The (Glasgow, UK)
Copyright: 2010 Herald & Times Group
Contact:  http://www.heraldscotland.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4784
Author: Rebecca Gray
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/Topic/Mephedrone

REVEALED: SCOTLAND'S DEALERS LOOK TO CHINA TO SUPPLY A NEW GENERATION 
OF LEGAL HIGHS

The former head of the Scottish Drug Enforcement Agency  says the 
country's teenagers are now 'guinea pigs' for  the Chinese drug labs 
manufacturing the next generation  of so-called 'legal highs' after 
the banning of  mephedrone on Friday.

Graeme Pearson, former director of the SDEA, says the  Far Eastern 
gangs which manufactured mephedrone for  consumption in the west are 
simply switching to the  production of new drugs following the ban, 
with the  intention of supplying the untested substances to those 
dealing in legal highs throughout the UK and Scotland.

Now head of Britain's first academic institute  monitoring crime -- 
the Unit for the Study of Serious  Organised Crime at the University 
of Glasgow's Centre  for Drug Misuse -- Pearson told the Sunday 
Herald:  "Obviously the use of mephedrone is very 
dangerous,  especially for young people, and it also 
proves  problematic as we don't fully understand the  substance's 
long-term effects.

"The ban is the only logical outcome, but there is no  doubt, people 
in these labs in China will already be  manufacturing the next 
generation of non-illegal  substances."

On the street, mephedrone is known as Mcat, Moonshine  and Bubbles, 
and was widely sold as plant food over the  counter in stores and on 
the internet prior to its ban.

Last month it claimed the life of Jordan Kiltie, 19,  from Ayrshire, 
whose mother Angie Kiltie went on to  call for the drug to be banned.

Legislation placing the drug and other related  compounds in the 
Class B category alongside cannabis  was rushed through Parliament 
after panic about the  drug gripped the country in recent months.

The Government's drugs advisers -- the Advisory Council  for the 
Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) -- found evidence the  substance was "likely 
to be harmful". Possession now  carries a maximum sentence of five 
years' imprisonment,  while dealers can receive up to 14 years.

However, the senior police chiefs have said that they  have "no 
intention" of "criminalising" young people  caught with mephedrone. 
Instead, officers insist they  will focus on suppliers. Ahead of the 
ban, a number of  internet sites selling the so-called legal high 
were closed down.

Mr Pearson continued: "We have reached a time, where  teenagers in 
the Western world have become guinea pigs  for other people's 
financial gains -- it's madness.  These people will have already 
changed the chemical  formula of mephedrone, making a new legal drug 
- -- so  that our young people can continue to stick plant food  up their nose."

He went on: "The way mephedrone was sold, in shops and  online, gave 
people the impression that it was safe.  Soon, young people were 
finding themselves in  difficulty. Although there is a more long term 
problem,  it is difficult to see what other action the Government 
could take on mephedrone."

Professor Neil McKeganey, from the Centre for Drug  Misuse Research, 
believes we are witnessing a  revolution in the drug trade.

"New highs come along very quickly, so it is difficult  to apply such 
rules. We only become aware of new highs  once they are a threat and 
then we can prevent them.

In some cases, by the time the new high is discovered,  young people 
and teenagers have been involved in it for  years."

Drug experts have also expressed concerns about  organised crime 
gangs becoming involved in the selling  of mephedrone now it is illegal.

Mr Pearson said there was "no doubt" that criminals  would move into 
the distribution and supply of these  former legal drugs with a 
"financial bonus attached".

"We will now see proft-led criminal elements in the  sale of 
mephedrone", he added.

Last month, the Government's former top drugs adviser  warned banning 
mephedrone could do more harm than good.

‘I'm in touch with Chinese suppliers who can  offer me a similar product'

Despite the banning of mephedrone, the Sunday Herald  has uncovered 
an entire new generation of chemical  highs on sale in Scotland sold 
by dealers working  directly with Chinese gangs to flood the UK with 
"designer drugs".

Although the media has focused on mephedrone in recent  months, due 
to the drug being linked to a number of  deaths, dealers in "legal 
highs" have many more  designer chemicals in stock. They are also 
working with  Chinese gangs to import new compounds which do not 
fall  foul of the updated UK drug legislation.

The new highs include substances such as MDPV,  methylone and 
butylone. All of them mimic the effects  of other, better-known 
drugs, such as cocaine and  ecstasy.

The new legal highs were made freely available to The  Sunday Herald, 
with no legal consequences, from four  websites selling drugs similar 
to mephedrone.

To avoid prosecution most dealers describe the designer  drugs as 
"plant food" or label them "not for human  consumption". Prior to its 
ban, mephedrone was sold and  packaged in a similar way, to keep the 
drug on the  right side of the law.

The Sunday Herald also rang one online supplier who  claimed to be 
liaising with "leading research chemists"  in China to develop 
replacement substances. Previously,  he had sold mephedrone.

The Glasgow-based supplier, who would only give his  name as Keith, 
said: "When I first set up the website  selling mephedrone, I wanted 
it to be completely  legitimately. No dodgy cash deals, pay my income 
tax,  while giving excellent service with a quality product  at the 
right price.

"In the first weeks, I bought my stock inside Britain,  but I then 
began buying direct from a manufacturer in  China, as it was cheaper. 
My business was running  smoothly, with a turnover of about #5,000 a 
week. Then  mephedrone hit the headlines. Its use was blamed for  the 
death of teenagers and then everything changed."

He continued: "On Friday, mephedrone was banned and I  closed down 
the website. Now, the taxman will lose  hundreds of thousands of 
pounds and the criminals will  step in. Now the millions who are 
stopped from getting  mephedrone legally will either buy illegally or 
try something new.

"No government, Labour or Tory, would have had the  courage to 
exercise the level of common sense needed to  keep it legal. Now, 
like hundreds of other businessmen  who sold mephedrone, I will find 
another legal high to  sell on a new website and I'm already in touch 
with  Chinese suppliers who can offer me a similar product.

"Am I comfortable with the concept of selling legal  highs? No.

"But I don't want to lose mine and my children's home.  So the 
decision has been made."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom