Pubdate: Tue, 16 Nov, 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Rodney Foo EIGHT S.J. KIDS IN DRUG SCARE Students Taken From Middle School To Hospitals Eight San Jose middle school students, ages 12 to 14, were booked on drug felonies Monday after dividing up a cache of Ecstasy during lunch time and then showing up high at the nurse's office, authorities said. The arrests astounded police, physicians, and the community because of the children's ages, the type of drug involved, and its occurrence at Chaboya Middle School, which opened in 1991 and three years later became a California Distinguished School, an honor bestowed on the state's top 5 to 10 percent of schools. "I didn't think something like that could happen at Chaboya," said Tom Matsumoto, who serves on the Evergreen School District board. "It's a nice campus; got a nice staff." Added officer Rubens Dalaison, police spokesman, "It's unusual because so many kids . . . were affected by the drug." The seven boys and one girl who took the synthetic designer drug were taken by ambulance from Chaboya to local hospitals after experiencing dizziness and elevated blood pressure. The boys were released from the hospitals a few hours after arriving. But the 12-year-old girl, who suffered a worse reaction than the others, was kept overnight for observation as a precaution at Regional Medical Center, formerly known as Alexian Brothers Hospital. The youths face potentially serious charges because the incident occurred on a school campus, Dalaison said. Two boys, 12 and 13, were being held at Santa Clara juvenile hall -- one was booked on suspicion of possessing drugs at a school and the other was booked on suspicion of trafficking drugs at a school. The six others were booked on suspicion of taking drugs on campus. They were cited and released to their parents, Dalaison said. Besides their legal problems, the students could be expelled or suspended. If the police allegations are true, the children's experimentation with Ecstasy is a rare case, health experts said. "At that age, they're into what we call the `gateway' drugs -- alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana," said Dan Lloyd, who oversees the clinical operation for the Children, Adolescent and Family Division of the Santa Clara County Alcohol and Drug Services Department. "Taking a hallucinogenic like Ecstasy is out of the realm for kids 12, 13, 14. It's atypical." Ecstasy was developed in Germany more than 80 years ago for use as an appetite suppressant but fell into disuse until it was revived by American researchers in the 1960s for psychotherapy. Patients were said to be more talkative after taking the drug. Many who have taken the drug, a stimulant and hallucinogen, describe feeling a sense of euphoria and well-being, which typically lasts for about six hours. Long popular among teens who attend all-night dance parties known as "raves," Ecstasy sells for $10 to $40 a dose, usually in the form of pills and tablets. But the drug exacts a costly toll to a person's health. "It feels so good that teens think it's benign," said Dr. Lawrence Isaacs of Santa Clara Valley Medical Center. "But it's potentially a very dangerous drug. It can cause heart problems, cerebral problems, bleeding in the brain," Isaacs said. "You can die from doing too much of this, and there's no real antidote." Hospital officials at San Jose Medical Center and Regional Med Center refused to discuss the specific medical conditions of any of the students. Not in grave danger But an emergency-room doctor who helped treat the youths said they were never in grave danger. "Potentially, if they ingested more than the usual dose, it could be pretty toxic," said Dr. Tony Yuan. "These kids got lucky. It didn't look like they had significant toxicities." School officials learned about the drug usage after the 12-year-old girl, who was escorted by another student, came into the office under the influence, Dalaison said. At 12:52 p.m., San Jose Fire Department paramedics were dispatched to the 46owler Road school's nurse's office, said Rob Piper, battalion chief . "She didn't answer (questions) appropriately," Piper said. While attending to her, the other students who had taken the drug trickled in, Piper said. Soon, the students began to spill the story: One of the boys had brought the drug onto campus, giving some of the pills away and selling some, Dalaison said. They students had a somewhat cavalier attitude, Piper said. "They were waving at their friends as they were going into the ambulance," he said. "I don't think they realized the seriousness of what could have happened to them." But, Piper added, "They did get real quiet when the police department showed up." Late Monday, investigators were trying to determine how the student accused of distributing the drug on the grounds of the 960-student school obtained it. "We're getting different stories from different (students)," Dalaison said Students vulnerable Police, public health, and school officials have long waged an anti-drug campaign with classroom programs that warn students about the dangers of taking drugs and the health and legal ramifications. "Most of the programs are geared toward high schools but there's definitely a need in that (middle school) age range when they're more vulnerable," said Lloyd. Staff Writers Lori Aratani, Michael Bazeley, Edwin Garcia, Donna Kato and Joshua Kwan contributed to this report. Contact Donna Kato at or (408) 920-5393 or Rodney Foo at or (408) 920-5258. - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder