Pubdate: Fri, 24 Feb 2012
Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2012 Nanaimo Daily News
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608
Author: Jason Van Rassel, Postmedia News

B.C. PINNED DOWN AS SOURCE OF KILLER ECSTASY IN ALBERTA

Police Say Deaths Linked to Drug Shipped by Organized Crime From This
Province

CALGARY - If history is any guide, the ecstasy that has killed 10
people in southern Alberta since last July likely came from the Lower
Mainland.

Law enforcement agencies around the world have identified Canada as a
major exporter of ecstasy, and the Lower Mainland is considered one of
the main places where it's made.

"It seems to be it's being controlled by certain organized crime
groups and the majority of ecstasy coming into Alberta is coming from
B.C.," said Sgt. Donna Hanson, the RCMP'S drug awareness co-ordinator
for Alberta.

Ecstasy is not a new drug, nor are deaths and illnesses associated
with taking it. 

What is new - and what has elevated concern among police and public 
health officials - is a spate of deaths among people who have taken 
ecstasy containing a highly toxic drug, paramethoxymethamphetamine (PMMA).

The provincial medical examiner's office has linked 10 recent deaths
in southern Alberta to ecstasy containing PMMA.

In neighbouring B.C., officials have linked five deaths in the past
six months to PMMA.

Police and drug experts have theories, mostly centred on the
availability of the substances, known as precursors, used to make ecstasy.

The main precursor in ecstasy is safrole, an oil taken from the
sassafras plant.

Criminals use chemical processes that change safrole's molecular
structure, eventually resulting in methylenedioxymethamphetamine
(MDMA), the drug known as ecstasy. 

"MDMA . . . is predominantly produced in Canada. As some of the 
precursors to produce MDMA are not controlled substances under 
Canadian law, they are often shipped in bulk from China and India," 
reads a 2012 threat assessment for Washington state written by the 
U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy.

The same report documented large quantities of ecstasy seized by U.S.
authorities in Washington state, presumably most of it coming from
B.C.

U.S. agencies responsible for border enforcement in Washington
intercepted 1.4 million doses in 2010 and 2.6 million doses the year
before.

Yet during the same time period, U.S. authorities didn't find a single
ecstasy lab in the Pacific Northwest region.

It's a similar story in Alberta, where police haven't discovered any
large-scale ecstasy labs in recent memory.

Two weeks ago, police laid trafficking charges against two Calgarians
found with nearly a kilogram of ecstasy powder containing PMMA, but
they are not accused of manufacturing the drug.

When authorities have found large amounts of ecstasy in Calgary, the
evidence has pointed toward the Lower Mainland.

In 2002, Canada Border Services Agency officers at Calgary
International Airport intercepted 120 kilograms of ecstasy powder
hidden inside pianos en route to Vancouver after arriving on a flight
from Frankfurt, Germany.

At the time, European countries were considered a major source of
ecstasy in Canada. 

No more: Canada is now a major producer and exporter according to the 
United Nations and U.S. agencies such as the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Ecstasy seized and tested by police is routinely found to contain
other drugs, such as methamphetamine.

But police in Alberta and B.C. recently identified a new risk: ecstasy
containing PMMA, which is highly potent in low doses.

Authorities said there is an added element of risk because PMMA is
slow-acting, making some people more prone to take large amounts if
the effects of the ecstasy don't kick in as quickly as they're
accustomed to.

Someone who believes they are taking a small amount of ecstasy could 
actually be unknowingly taking a lethal amount of PMMA.  Officials in 
Alberta and B.C. began noticing deaths and hospitalizations linked to 
PMMA in mid-2011, raising the issue of why someone began putting it in ecstasy.

Without proof of any more complicated reasons, experts have offered a
simple explanation: supply and demand.

If supplies of the usual precursors became scarce for some reason,
manufacturers would probably turn to something similar.

"You have groups that are waiting for the next cook, the next quantity
to come, so they'll use the next best thing," said Martin Bouchard, a
Simon Fraser University criminology professor who co-wrote a recent
study on ecstasy and methamphetamine trafficking for Public Safety
Canada.

Although Bouchard's research takes issue with U.S. and UN studies that
rank Canada as one of the world's top exporters of ecstasy, he said
large seizures made abroad leave little doubt Canadian organized crime
groups are capable of making vast quantities.

"Certainly, we're a major player based on our population," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.