Ketamine is the new ‘stuff’

Clubbers and addicts are increasingly turning away from ecstasy and heroin to ketamine, a dangerous horse tranquilliser that has been linked to 23 deaths.According to a leading drug charity worker, addicts on Teesside are turning to the drug because it’s purer than heroin, while research by Newcastle-based Drugscope found there was an increased use amongst clubbers of the narcotic.Tina Williams, of Parents and Addicts Against Narcotics in the Community said: “Ketamine is the new ‘stuff’ and we have a lot of people using. It’s definitely on the increase.
“It’s a horse sedative and it has a similar effect to heroin. Addicts have cottoned onto this as heroin is now so diluted in the region they can’t even get a hit off it.“It’s readily available and now addicts have more options rather than just heroin and crack.
“Because it’s a class C drug people don’t think that it can be dangerous.”
Known as Special K, Vitamin K or simply K, the drug is developing a strong following in dance club circuits despite being made illegal three years ago.It is usually snorted or swallowed but according to research by Drugscope, more and more people are choosing to inject it.At low levels users feel euphoric, experience waves of energy and even a condition called synaesthesia where users’ senses merge into one another.
But at higher levels the drug can cause paralysis, hallucinations and a disassociation that is close to an out of body experience. It is also a known date rape drug as it has no taste and is odourless.

Alcohol related deaths

Alcohol related deaths have almost trebled over the last 25 years, according to new research. Skip related content
Related photos / videosCalls for minimum alcohol price limits Play video Darts legend Andy Fordham says alcohol nearly ... Play video Calls for minimum alcohol price limits Play video Drink deaths 'have trebled in 25 years' A study carried out by the University of the West of England for Alcohol Concern suggests that 90,800 people will die from drinking too much in the next ten years if current consumption levels continue.
The charity said alcohol-related deaths went from 3,054 in 1984 to 8,999 in 2008.Alcohol Concern Chief Executive Don Shenker said: "Whilst there has been a small reduction in consumption and mortality over the last two years, the overall trend is a rise in consumption and a trebling of deaths since 1984."This rise runs in parallel with the growing affordability of alcohol. Without policies which more effectively target the cheap price of alcohol we will not get to grips with what has become one of the country's biggest public health problems."Brigid Simmonds, Chief Executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: "Alcohol policies designed to reduce drinking in the whole population are misguided. Controls on the total amount we drink will not work. What we need is a new debate about effective policy measures that are clearly targeted at the minority who misuse alcohol."
England is one of the heaviest drinking countries in Europe, with more than a third of men and a fifth of women exceeding Government limits, Alcohol Concern said.
In 2006 to 2007, the estimated cost of alcohol abuse to the NHS was £2.7 billion, and the Government said last year that the total expense of harm caused by drink was around £17.7 to £25.1 billion per year.

number of under-25s seeking treatment for dependency on cocaine is rising significantly

The trends are revealed in a previously unpublished analysis by the NHS's National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse (NTA) of data on addicts in England who receive treatment for their drug habit. The agency believes that the statistics "herald a generational shift in patterns of drug dependence in England".young adults with a drug problem are using heroin and crack – the two substances most likely to cause addiction, increase crime and pose serious health risks – but the number of under-25s seeking treatment for dependency on cocaine is rising significantly, official figures show.NTA data passed to the Guardian shows that the number of 18- to 24-year-olds newly presenting for treatment for heroin or crack fell by 22% from 12,320 in 2005-06 to 9,632 in 2007-08, even though drug treatment was more readily available than ever. However, the number of over-35s seeking treatment for the first time rose by 11%, from 20,465 in 2005-06 to 22,770 two years later.Over the same period, the number of young adults seeking help from a drug treatment service for cocaine problems rose from 1,591 to 2,692 – a rise of 69%.Overall, the number of young adults seeking help for misuse of heroin, crack or powder cocaine fell from about 14,000 in 2005 to about 12,000 in 2008 – evidence of another encouraging trend.
The NTA's annual report, to be published on Thursday, is expected to confirm that both the shift away from heroin and crack and the growing problem of cocaine addiction in under-25s continued in 2008-09.Paul Hayes, the NTA's chief executive, said: "It is reassuring that younger people seem to be turning away from heroin and crack. The quite significant reduction in the numbers of people seeking help [for those drugs] probably illustrates an actual fall in problematic use because help has never been more available."Fewer people using heroin is good news as heroin is the most dangerous of all the drugs that people use. Given it involves a significant risk of overdose, HIV and hepatitis C, and is associated with acquisitive crime, I'm convinced that individuals, communities and wider society will benefit, especially the poorest communities, which heroin affects most."However, the increase in cocaine dependency among the same age group was "very significant" and worrying, added Hayes. "There's been an increase in cocaine use generally for a few years, especially in the younger age groups, and that's now being reflected in significant additional numbers being treated for cocaine. That's worrying because cocaine dependency can be associated with health damage, crime and problems in individuals, although it's not as problematic as heroin because it's not injected."Heroin became a major problem in Britain in the 1980s amid growing unemployment. Better economic circumstances in recent years may help to explain its declining popularity among younger drug users, said Hayes. In addition, he said, "people understand now what using hard drugs like heroin and crack leads to, whereas in the 1980s people weren't so aware of its consequences. It's lost a lot of its glamour. It's associated with losers rather than risk-takers. Heroin and crack are seen as dirty, nasty, horrible drugs, whereas cocaine can be seen by some people as an adjunct to the party lifestyle, in the same way that alcohol can be."The NTA's research tallies with growing evidence from frontline drug workers that younger users are increasingly using cocaine as part of a combination of illicit substances. "The emerging problems facing drug projects who run young people's services aren't [clients using] heroin and crack but strong alcohol, strong cannabis, cocaine and ecstasy – a different basket of drugs to the older generation," said Harry Shapiro, of Drugscope, which represents about 800 local drug agencies in the UK. Experts refer to this pattern of drug use as "the ACCE profile".
In all, 530 young adults aged 18-25 were referred to the Mosaic drug and alcohol service in Stockport in 2007-08. Of those, 193 were seeking treatment for cannabis, 175 for alcohol, 115 for cocaine and only 27 for heroin. A survey of men aged 19-25 in the town found that the drugs that most had tried were cannabis (64%), powder cocaine (33%) and ecstasy (32%). Cocaine's greater availability and ensuing cheaper price is believed to explain its popularity."It's good that fewer young people appear to be using heroin," said Shapiro. "But the fact that young people who have drug problems now increasingly have problems of cocaine, cannabis and alcohol addiction means that we still have a serious problem here. There's also a challenge in this for drug treatment services, which are very much geared up to the needs of heroin users, and their ability to deal with a new generation of problem drug users who don't fit the traditional profile."Roger Howard, chief executive of the UK Drug Policy Commission thinktank, said: "There is a generational shift under way, with older, more chronic heroin users entrenched in heroin and a younger adult group who are much more into multi-drug use. It's worrying that we're seeing more people with multiple drug use because they are much more difficult to treat."The fact that cocaine users are usually better-off and less isolated from their families than heroin users may make them less likely to ask the UK's network of drug services for help, he added.

Jamaica Transnational Crimes and Narcotics

Transnational Crimes and Narcotics Division is reporting that 53 people were arrested last month for ingesting and attempting to export drugs at the country’s two international airports. The number includes men and women. In addition the division says two persons died. One of the two died after ingesting marijuana while the other died after ingesting cocaine pellets. The Transnational Crimes and Narcotics division says a number of the people caught before September are now hospitalized after ingesting drug pellets which broke.

Immunization with an experimental anti-cocaine vaccine resulted in a substantial reduction in cocaine use

Immunization with an experimental anti-cocaine vaccine resulted in a substantial reduction in cocaine use in 38 percent of vaccinated patients in a clinical trial supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), a component of the National Institutes of Health. The study, published in the October issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry, is the first successful, placebo-controlled demonstration of a vaccine against an illicit drug of abuse."The results of this study represent a promising step toward an effective medical treatment for cocaine addiction," said NIDA Director Dr. Nora Volkow. "Provided that larger follow-up studies confirm its safety and efficacy, this vaccine would offer a valuable new approach to treating cocaine addiction, for which no FDA-approved medication is currently available."Like vaccines against infectious diseases such as measles and influenza, the anti-cocaine vaccine stimulates the immune system to produce antibodies. Unlike antibodies against infectious diseases, which destroy or deactivate the disease-causing agents, anti-cocaine antibodies attach themselves to cocaine molecules in the blood, preventing them from passing through the blood-brain barrier. By preventing the drug's entry into the brain, the vaccine inhibits or blocks the cocaine-induced euphoria.This study included 115 patients from a methadone maintenance program who were randomly assigned to receive the anti-cocaine vaccine or a placebo (inactive) vaccine. Participants were recruited from a methadone maintenance program because their retention rates are substantially better than programs focused primarily on treatment for cocaine abuse. Participants in both groups received five vaccinations over a 12-week period and were followed for an additional 12 weeks. All participants also took part in weekly relapse-prevention therapy sessions with a trained substance abuse counselor, had their blood tested for antibodies to cocaine, and had their urine tested three times a week for the presence of opioids and cocaine.Participants differed in the levels of antibodies generated in response to vaccination. Thirty-eight percent attained blood levels of anti-cocaine antibodies thought to be sufficient to block cocaine's euphoric effects. During weeks 9 to 16 (when antibody levels peaked), these participants had significantly more cocaine-free urines than those who received the placebo or those with active vaccine but low levels of anti-cocaine antibodies. Participants with the highest antibody levels had the greatest reductions in cocaine use. No serious adverse effects were associated with vaccine treatment."Fifty-three percent of participants in the high-antibody group were abstinent from cocaine more than half the time during weeks 8 to 20, compared with only 23 percent of participants with lower levels of antibodies," said Thomas Kosten, M.D., of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, the study's principal investigator.
"In this study immunization did not achieve complete abstinence from cocaine use," added Dr. Kosten. "Previous research has shown, however, that a reduction in use is associated with a significant improvement in cocaine abusers' social functioning and thus is therapeutically meaningful."Dr. Kosten led the study in collaboration with colleagues from Yale University School of Medicine, the Connecticut Veterans Administration (VA) Healthcare System, Baylor College of Medicine, and the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center.

where exactly do the authorities get their heroin from?

The government is considering whether legal, injectable heroin might be one way to tackle the effects of drug abuse, but where exactly do the authorities get their heroin from?After a trial reported success in tackling use of street drugs and crime, Justice Secretary Jack Straw has suggested that prescribing heroin on the NHS may be the only way to deal with some users. Most people probably think of opium poppies coming from Taliban-controlled fields in Afghanistan or from the Far East's Golden Triangle, but it is perfectly possible to produce opium in the UK.
Diamorphine for the addict treatment trial is produced in the UK
The UK has one diamorphine producerPoppies are grown in Hampshire, Wiltshire and elsewhere in the south of EnglandIndeed, all of the diamorphine - equivalent to heroin - used in the UK's addict treatment trial is produced in the country. Opiates firm Macfarlan Smith, a subsidiary of Johnson Matthey, is the country's sole diamorphine producer.
It holds contracts with farmers in the south of England - including Hampshire and Wiltshire - to grow crops of poppies, says Ian Godwin, communications director for Johnson Matthey. The firm takes the harvest and processes the poppies into what is called "active pharmaceutical ingredient" (API). This API is then passed on to a UK pharmaceuticals firm to be turned into doses. The processing of opium poppies is done under government licence in "extremely secure" conditions.
The world's pharmaceutical firms get their poppies from everywhere from Spain to India, but the biggest producer is Tasmania in Australia. In Tasmania, a thousand farmers grow poppies across about 13,000 acres and it is one of the island's major exports.
The growing of poppies there can only be done under licence and there are strict controls on access to the field. Possession of opium poppies is a crime. Heroin is not just for addicts but also for other medical uses
The heroin prescription trial in the UK, which is being run at the National Addiction Centre, initially used diamorphine imported specially from Switzerland and distinct from the NHS's own stockpile. It moved to using British diamorphine when that became a cheap enough option. The cost of a year's diamorphine treatment for an addict is about £15,000, although this includes administering and supervising the injections. There have been similar trials involving pharmaceutical heroin in the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and Canada. But the UK also has another use for diamorphine. It continues to be used in palliative care, to relieve pain in terminally ill people. A recent problem with supply led to many doctors using other opioids, says Dr Bill Noble, president of the Association for Palliative Medicine. "It is virtually the same as using morphine. The only difference is that diamorphine is much more soluble than morphine, which means you can have much lower volume injections."A regular part of the BBC News Magazine, Who, What, Why? aims to answer some of the questions behind the headlines
It is also used as part of the treatment for some patients with acute heart failure.
Diamorphine does not tend to be used in other countries for palliative purposes simply because it is illegal, says Dr Noble.

Health officials have stepped up their efforts to call attention to health risks caused by cocaine laced with levamisole

Health officials have stepped up their efforts to call attention to health risks caused by cocaine laced with levamisole, a veterinary anti-parasitic drug. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) has issued a nationwide health alert to medical professionals, substance abuse treatment centers and other public health authorities.
In humans, levamisole can cause agranulocytosis, a serious, sometimes fatal blood disorder. Ingesting cocaine mixed with levamisole can seriously reduce a person's white blood cells, suppressing immune function and the body's ability to fight off even minor infections, according to SAMHSA. People who use crack or powdered cocaine laced with levamisole can experience overwhelming, rapidly-developing, life-threatening infections, the agency said in a news release.Other serious side effects can also occur. If you use cocaine watch out for:
High fever, chills, or weakness.
Swollen glands,Painful sores (mouth, anal)
Infections that won't go away or gets worse very fast
Skin infections, abscesses
Thrush (white coating of the mouth, tongue, or throat)
Pneumonia (fever, cough, shortness of breath)
"SAMHSA and other public health authorities are working together to inform everyone of this serious potential public health risk and what measures are being taken to address it," said SAMHSA Acting Administrator Eric Broderick.
The number of reported cases of agranulocytosis due to tainted cocaine use is expected to increase as information about levamisole is disseminated through the medical community. Thus far, 20 known cases and two deaths have been confirmed.According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Columbia cocaine producers are lacing their product with the medication to give it an extra kick.

Scheme in which heroin is given to addicts in supervised clinics has led to big reductions in the use of street drugs and crime

Scheme in which heroin is given to addicts in supervised clinics has led to big reductions in the use of street drugs and crime, the BBC has learned. More than 100 users took part in the pilot – part funded by the government – in London, Brighton and Darlington. They either injected heroin or received the drug’s substitute methadone. Those given heroin responded best and an independent panel which monitored the scheme over six months are advising ministers to set up further trials. About three-quarters of those given heroin were said to have "substantially" reduced their use of street drugs. Research suggests that between half and two-thirds of all crime in the UK is drug-related. The Home Office says on its website that about three-quarters of crack and heroin users claim they commit crime to feed their habits.
PILOT SCHEME FINDINGS
Three-quarters reduced use of street heroin
Offences down from 1,731 in 30 days to 547 in six months
Spending on drugs down from £300 to £50 a week
Figures for group given heroin Professor John Strang, who led the project, said the results were "very positive" because the scheme had helped cut crime and avoid "expensive" prison sentences. Professor Strang, who is based at the National Addiction Centre, part of King’s Health Partners, said the individuals on the programme were among those who had been the hardest to treat. "It’s as if each of them is an oil tanker heading for disaster and so the purpose of this trial is to see: ‘Can you turn them around Is it possible to avert disaster’ "And the surprising finding – which is good for the individuals and good for society as well – is that you can," he said. The Randomised Injecting Opioid Treatment Trial (RIOTT) programme – which is funded by a number of agencies, including the Department of Health – began in 2005. It involved 127 chronic heroin addicts for whom conventional types of treatment had failed. Many of the addicts were also using other substances, including crack cocaine. During the trials, a third of addicts were given the heroin substitute methadone orally and another third injected methadone under supervision. The remainder, observed by nurses, injected themselves with diamorphine – unadulterated heroin – imported from Switzerland.
National roll-out,Those on the programme were also given psychological support and help with their housing and social needs. The results showed that addicts in all three groups cut the amount of heroin they obtained illicitly from street dealers. According to researchers, more than half of the heroin injecting group were said to be "largely abstinent" and one-in-five did not use street heroin at all. Before they began the programme, the addicts in the heroin injecting group were spending more than £300 a week on street drugs. After six months, this had reduced to an average of £50 a week."It used to be about chasing the buzz, but when you go on the programme you just want to feel comfortable"John, RIOTT participant
There was also a big drop in the number of offences addicts admitted committing to obtain money to feed their habit. In the previous month before the scheme started, addicts in the heroin injecting group reported carrying out 1,731 crimes. After six months, this had fallen to 547 offences – a reduction of more than two-thirds. One of the heroin addicts on the programme, a 34-year-old man called John, had been addicted for eight years when the trials began. He fed his habit by dealing. "My life was just a shambles… waking up, chasing money, chasing drugs," he said.
But John said the scheme had transformed his life "100 per cent" and he now had a part-time job. "It used to be about chasing the buzz, but when you go on the programme you just want to feel comfortable," he said.
"I’ve started reducing my dose gradually, so that maybe in a few months time I’ll be able to come off it altogether, drug free totally." In its drug strategy, published last year, the government said it would "roll out" the prescription of injectible heroin, subject to the findings of the pilot scheme. The National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse (NTA), which administers drug treatment in England, said the results were "encouraging". The NTA said an independent expert group, set up to advise the government, had concluded that there was enough "positive evidence of the benefits" of the programme to merit further pilots. The NTA is understood to be keen to evaluate the financial implications of the scheme. At £15,000 per user per year, supervised heroin injecting is three times more expensive than other treatments.

PREGNANT Filipinas are the favorite “carriers” of drug syndicates bringing illegal drugs to China and Malaysia

PREGNANT Filipinas are the favorite “carriers” of drug syndicates bringing illegal drugs to China and Malaysia, according to former labor undersecretary Susan Ople, head of the Blas Ople Policy Center. Ople’s group is helping overseas Filipino workers victimized by drug syndicates. She said these groups use pregnant women as drug mules because they are least to be eyed as couriers and they get lighter penalties if they get arrested

controversial scheme to give addicts heroin at supervised clinics has led to a reduction in crime.

controversial scheme to give addicts heroin at supervised clinics has led to a reduction in crime. More than a hundred addicts took part in the scheme in London, Brighton and Darlington which was part funded by the government. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8254872.stm
Here's a report by Danny Shaw, the BBC home affairs correspondent:
Is this the right approach to tackling the problem of drugs and crime? If you've been a drug user or the victim of drug related crime are you in favour of this approach? Are you happy with any measures that reduce crime or do you feel that this is an example of society going soft on drug addicts?
In 1994 the Swiss embarked on their Heroin Assisted Treatment project. This resulted in a significant improvement of health (both mentally and physically) for the majority of the over 1200 participants. In addition, a massive reduction in criminal behavior was observed.The HAT outpatient centers are spread over the following Swiss cities : Basel, Bern, Biel, Brugg, Burgdorf, Chur, Geneva, Horgen, Lucerne, Olten, Reinach, Schaffhausen, Solothurn, St. Gallen, Thun, Winterthur, Wetzikon, Zug, Zürich and in two prisons Oberschöngrün (canton Solthurn) and Realtà
The Swiss Federal office for public health reports that :
In many cases, patients’ physical and mental health has improved, their housing situation has become considerably more stable, and they have gradually managed to find employment. Numerous participants have managed to reduce their debts. In most cases, contacts with addicts and the drug scene have decreased. Consumption of non-prescribed substances declined significantly in the course of treatment.
Dramatic changes have been seen in the situation regarding crime. While the proportion of patients who obtained their income from illegal or borderline activities at the time of enrollment was 70%, the figure after 18 months of HAT was only 10%.Each year, between 180 and 200 patients discontinue HAT. Of these patients, 35-45% are transferred to methadone maintenance, and 23-27% to abstinence-based treatment.The average costs per patient-day at outpatient treatment centers in 1998 came to CHF 51. The overall economic benefit - based on savings in criminal investigations and prison terms and on improvements in health - was calculated to be CHF 96. After deduction of costs, the net benefit is CHF 45 per patient-day.

Lady Gaga turns up in heroin bust

Lady Gaga turns up in heroin bust: "Lady Gaga is used to seeing her name on the top Billboard charts.
But this week may have marked the first time her name has ended up on bags of heroin. MTV News is reporting that authorities in Syracuse, New York responded to a tip last Tuesday that a large shipment of heroin was on a bus that had just departed from New York City. When police finally gained access to the vehicle, they found more than just 15 grams of heroin. They also found Lady Gaga - at least, her name.
It turns out the drugs didn't belong to Lady Gaga. Unfortunately, the singer is just the latest celebrity to have their name attributed to a widely distributed street drug."

Drug Prevention

1. Strengthen faith
2. Choosing a healthy social environment
3. Good communication
4. Avoid the way in of drugs, namely cigarettes

PREVENT MISUSE OF ALCOHOL AND DRUGS

PARENT COMMUNICATION

Abuse of alcohol and drugs used by kids is a controversy which is worrying for all parents.From some research that has been done, it was agreed that the building fabric of intense communication between parents & kids is a powerful device to prevent the things that are not desired.

From an American study said that plenty of young individuals who follow the rehabilitation program said that they consumed alcohol or drugs two years before their parents know about it. therefore, establishes the communication as early as feasible and do not wait until your kids are involved the issue.

Do not be afraid to admit that you are unable to answer all the questions there. Let your kids know that interest you, then you can work together to get answers that query.

Symptoms of Marijuana Use

- feeling excited and happy
- Relaxed and weak
- Indifferent
- Red eye
- Increased appetite
- Dry mouth
- Lack of self control
- Often yawn / sleepy
- Poor concentration
- Depression

DRUGS Treatment

DRUGS Treatment
  1. Addiction treatment (detox)
  2. Treatment of infections
  3. Rehabilitation
  4. Independent training

Symptoms of Use Drug What Overstated

Opiates (heroin, morphine, marijuana) :
  • feelings of pleasure and happiness
  • ignorant
  • lazy to move
  • sleepy
  • nausea
  • talking lisp
  • Pupils shrinking (widening if overdosed)
  • Disorders of attention / memory

90,000 people will die over the next 10 years from drink unless cheap alcohol is banned

90,000 people will die over the next 10 years from drink unless cheap alcohol is banned, a new report has claimed. Skip related content
Related photos / videos Enlarge photo
Related content
Drink deaths 'treble in 25 years'
Call made for minimum alcohol price
Alcohol 'Will Kill 90,000' In Next Decade
Related Hot Topic: Binge Drinking
Have your say: Binge Drinking
The charity Alcohol Concern issued the sobering warning after its latest research found drink-related deaths have trebled in Britain over the last 25 years from 3,054 in 1984 to 8,999 in 2008.

To combat the problem, it proposes banning cheap booze by forcing suppliers to charge at least 50p per unit.

Doing so would substantially reduce hospital admissions, crime and absence from work, the report claims.

Research by the University of the West of England used by Alcohol Concern found there would be 90,800 deaths linked to drink by 2019 if current consumption continues.



The lead author, Professor Martin Plant, said: "The UK has been experiencing an epidemic of alcohol-related health and social problems that is remarkable by international standards."

The findings coincide with a new drive to reduce binge drinking in Greater Manchester, where the problem is particularly acute.

Councils in the area are actively considering a minimum price for booze sold in its pubs, clubs and supermarkets.

Police there have just begun a clampdown on licensees and bar staff who illegally serve people who are already drunk.

But although binge drinking is usually blamed on the younger generations, Alcohol Concern has revealed the steepest rise in alcohol-related deaths is among the 55 to 74-year-olds.

Peter Ivory still finds it hard to believe how close he came to being in that category.

The 62-year-old former store manager from Sunderland always thought of himself as a social drinker.

A few years ago his holiday was cut dramatically short when he was flown back from Spain with excruciating stomach pain. He collapsed and eventually had to have a liver transplant.

He said: "I suppose I should consider myself lucky that I'm still alive.

"But actually - if you lose your liver you lose your life."

Peter now struggles with simple undemanding tasks and suffers from constant fatigue, nerve pain, high blood pressure and depression.

He believes the "British epidemic" is leading thousands of young people down the same road.

"People have to listen to the stories of people like me," he said.

"We now have young people who are wrecking their lives. This is not about me telling others not to drink. It's about asking them to hear me and to plead with them not to end up like me."

Cocaine use led to Bugg

News: Cocaine use led to Bugg's death — Baton Rouge, LA: "Baton Rouge radio and television personality Ed Buggs died of a “cardiac event due to cocaine use,” a spokesman with the East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner’s Office said today.
The cause of death was determined after the results of a toxicology test were evaluated, Don Moreau said.
Buggs, 55, died May 4 at his home, his brother, Clarence Buggs has said.
Following his television work, Buggs worked as a radio talk show host on WJBO-AM in 1997 and later for WIBR-AM.
Clarence Buggs said his brother had recently been working for Win-Tech, a company that manufactures bulletproof coats for buildings and vehicles."

Ketamine is the new stuff’

Clubbers and addicts are increasingly turning away from ecstasy and heroin to ketamine, a dangerous horse tranquilliser that has been linked to 23 deaths.According to a leading drug charity worker, addicts on Teesside are turning to the drug because it’s purer than heroin, while research by Newcastle-based Drugscope found there was an increased use amongst clubbers of the narcotic.Tina Williams, of Parents and Addicts Against Narcotics in the Community said: “Ketamine is the new ‘stuff’ and we have a lot of people using. It’s definitely on the increase.

“It’s a horse sedative and it has a similar effect to heroin. Addicts have cottoned onto this as heroin is now so diluted in the region they can’t even get a hit off it.“It’s readily available and now addicts have more options rather than just heroin and crack.
“Because it’s a class C drug people don’t think that it can be dangerous.”


Known as Special K, Vitamin K or simply K, the drug is developing a strong following in dance club circuits despite being made illegal three years ago.It is usually snorted or swallowed but according to research by Drugscope, more and more people are choosing to inject it.At low levels users feel euphoric, experience waves of energy and even a condition called synaesthesia where users’ senses merge into one another.
But at higher levels the drug can cause paralysis, hallucinations and a disassociation that is close to an out of body experience. It is also a known date rape drug as it has no taste and is odourless.

Reggae singer Buju Banton was arrested in Miami.


Reggae singer Buju Banton was arrested in Miami. The singer, whose real name is Mark Anthony Myrie, faces possible life imprisonment if convicted on charges of drug conspiracy charges.Allegedly, Buju Banton was conspiring to distribute 5 kilos of the drug cocaine.This isn't the first time Buju Banton has been in the headlines. His song "Boom Boom Bye" has hateful and violent lyrics aimed toward creating violence against the LGBT community. In response, many of his concerts were cancelled.
He also made headlines when his album Rasta Got Soul was actually nominated for a Grammy Award.

Meth Factory

The sale of some cold remedies will be restricted to one small pack per customer in Britain to prevent gangs making the crack-like drug, crystal meth.


Government medical advisors said on Wednesday that large packs of decongestants containing the chemicals ephedrine and pseudoephedrine would be withdrawn from sale.

They would be replaced by packs of 12 or 24 tablets containing a total of 720 mg of the drugs.

The move follows police concerns that criminals are using the ingredients to manufacture methylamphetamine – crystal meth – in illegal laboratories.

Although use of the drug is low in Britain, the government is anxious to prevent the problem growing to the serious levels seen elsewhere.

However, the medicines will remain on sale at pharmacies and not become prescription-only, as had been suggested in a consultation which ended in June.

Drugs manufacturers, who had lobbied against prescription-only sales, welcomed the new restrictions.

"This is a sensible and proportionate approach to a problem that is still almost non-existent in this country, but one we all want to avoid," said Sheila Kelly, executive director of the Proprietary Association of Great Britain (PAGB).

There has been only known case – on the Isle of Wight – of an illegal crystal meth lab in Britain using pharmacy products, the PAGB says.

The restriction will affect around one in 10 cold remedies sold in Britain, including versions of Actifed, Benylin, Lemsip, Meltus and Sudafed.

All are already only sold in chemists and are kept behind the counter.

The smaller pack sizes would be sufficient for around three days' treatment, the PAGB said.

Most people only need to take decongestants for one or two days, it added.

A government advisory body will monitor the restrictions for the next two years to check they are working.

It will retain the option to recommend moving the medicines to prescription sale if the measures do not reduce the risk of illegal crystal meth manufacture.

Methamphetamine

Methamphetamine can be cooked up using a handful of household chemicals, but byproducts can include toxic waste in the local water supply, fires and explosions.
Sold as crystals, pills or powder, it can be smoked, swallowed or injected and is said to be highly addictive.

Globally, users are said to outnumber those of heroin and cocaine combined.

Highly Addictive, U.K. newest drug problem

Crystal is made of highly volatile, toxic substances (based on such chemical "precursors" as methylamine and amyl amine) that are melded in differing combinations, forming what some have described as a "mix of laundry detergent and lighter fluid."

The mixes are never exactly the same, but basic types are a rough yellow substance called Hydro and a smooth white blend called Glass. Half a gram costs around £25 and a £15 hit would probably keep you going for a few days.

The drug can either be snorted or injected, or in its crystal form 'ice' smoked in a pipe, and brings on a feeling of exhilaration and a sharpening of focus. Smoking ice results in an instantaneous dose of almost pure drug to the brain, giving a huge rush followed by a feeling of euphoria for anything from 2-16 hours.

For some this could result in obsessive cleaning or tidying, but for many the biggest bonus is the sense of sexual liberation which can result in mad, abandoned sex for hours - sometimes days - on end.

‘Cheese’ Heroin for Children

New Designer ‘Cheese’ Heroin for Children Pattaya Daily News - Pattaya news Powerful news at your fingertips: "Coming from Mexico to Texas, the black tar heroin is now being converted to a brown granular powder that resembles parmesan cheese which makes it much more appealing to the younger children. It has been circulating Texas for the last couple of years and because of the low cost, it is very affordable for young children with costs ranging from $2 – $10 per pack. This new form of heroin is known the kids as ‘Mickey’ juice and has so far been responsible for the deaths of over 200 youngsters with many more in rehab. Street dealers will sell to a kid who mixes it with crushed Tylenol PM and water. The product will then be ‘cooked’, until the liquid has evaporated leaving a brown grainy powder. It is then wrapped in notebook paper then sold on for a set price."

Doctor sentenced to 7 years for trafficking heroin

Doctor sentenced to 7 years for trafficking heroin: "physician from Mexico who was among a group who each transported more than a kilogram of heroin from Arizona to New York City has been sentenced to more than seven years in federal prison.
The U.S. attorney's office in Phoenix says another man from San Luis, Mexico, who also was involved in the smuggling ring got a slightly lower sentence.
U.S. District Judge G. Murray Snow sentenced 39-year-old Dr. Jose David Portillo Lopez this week. A co-defendant, 38-year-old Juan Bautista Beltran Lopez, was sentenced last month. Both had pleaded guilty to heroin trafficking charges.
Court records show Portillo and Beltran and two women picked up footwear containing 5 kilos of heroin in San Luis, Ariz., in December 2007. Federal agents investigating a Columbian cartel tracked them as they drove to Manhattan, where they were arrested."

timesofmalta.com - Heroin and cocaine find leads to eight arrests

timesofmalta.com - Heroin and cocaine find leads to eight arrests: "Eight people have been arrested following a heroin and cocaine find at Marsa this morning, the police said.
They said the Drug Squad investigated information that a man was selling drugs from a garage and residence near the horse racing track in Malta.
The police started observing the place and confirmed the investigation it had been given. The 50-year-old man from Sta Venera was seen hiding the drugs outside the residence while keeping another quantity in the garage.
The police held people who turned up to buy drugs. They are aged between 22 and 47 and are from Fgura, Hamrun, St Julian’s, Birkirkara and Qormi.
Magistrate Jacqueline Padovani Grima is holding an inquiry."

Baggage handler at Memphis airport faces drug smuggling charge after undercover operation - WHNT

Baggage handler at Memphis airport faces drug smuggling charge after undercover operation - WHNT: "baggage handler at Memphis International Airport is charged with drug smuggling after federal authorities say he accepted a bag filled with 40,000 fake ecstasy pills and agreed to deliver it to an undercover agent.

in Memphis Gora Sow, an employee of Delta-Northwest Airlines , was arrested Tuesday on charges of attempting to possess drugs with intent to distribute, and transportation and concealment of merchandise.

Sow has a federal court hearing Monday and it is not immediately known if he has a lawyer."

British and South African authorities

British and South African authorities have made a record heroin seizure following on operation at London's Heathrow Airport and raids in both countries, officials said.Immigration officials discovered some of the drugs hidden in souvenirs from South Africa at Heathrow, sparking an investigation that netted 360 kilograms of heroin in total, the UK Border Agency said.Seven people have been arrested in both countries over the total seizure, worth $US41 million, the agency said.Thousands of kilograms of cannabis were also discovered, the agency said."This latest detection of heroin at Heathrow, believed to be our biggest ever, highlights our success in preventing class A drugs entering the UK," said Philip Astle, the UK Border Agency's Heathrow director.

About 165 kilograms were discovered at Heathrow, a record seizure for the world's busiest airport, on September 9 in the consignment of souvenirs.After an investigation, police seized another 80 kilograms and arrested two people in Kent, south-east England, charging one with conspiracy to import drugs and possession, the agency said.Acting on information from Britain, South African police arrested five people, including three British nationals, and seized 115 kilograms of heroin and 6,500 kilograms of cannabis in a warehouse outside Durban. "These seizures are a great example of what can happen when partners work together, said Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency deputy director Andy Sellers."Both ends of this international chain have been attacked, and a significant amount of heroin and cannabis has been kept off the UK's streets." Staff at Heathrow airport uncovered drugs when they stopped a consignment of souvenirs from South Africa earlier this month.On closer inspection, they found 165kg of heroin hidden in the goods.
Officials from the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) were alerted and a house was raided in Maidstone, Kent, where more heroin was discovered.


There have also been searches in Durban, South Africa, where further drug finds were made.A total of 360kg of heroin has now been recovered, as well as 6,500kg of herbal cannabis resin.The estimated street value of the drugs is £25m.Seven people have been arrested, including five in South Africa and two in Britain.Sky's home affairs correspondent Mark White said: "This is being hailed as a great success for the UK Border Agency which, in conjunction with SOCA, managed to thwart what was a huge shipment of the class A drug heroin into the UK."The agency claims to have managed to intercept an international drug smuggling ring, he added.The discovery of the heroin was made a week ago but details of the bust were kept secret while operations were still active.

Iran hangs four convicted drug smugglers - agency | Reuters

Iran hangs four convicted drug smugglers - agency Reuters: "Since authorities launched a clampdown on 'immoral behaviour' in July 2007, police have arrested dozens of drug addicts, smugglers, rapists and murderers.
'These four people were hanged in the central prison of Yazd province after they were convicted of drug smuggling,' Fars said.
Human rights groups often criticise Iran and say the Islamic republic has one of the highest execution rates in the world.
Murder, adultery, rape, armed robbery, drug trafficking and apostasy -- the renouncing of Islam -- are all punishable by death under Iran's Islamic law practised since the 1979 revolution."

Former Yaletown high-flyer now facing U.S. drug-smuggling charges

Former Yaletown high-flyer now facing U.S. drug-smuggling charges: "Rick Bafaro and his ex-wife Jessica Ruth were hailed in 2002 as one of Yaletown’s “glam couples.”
They owned a pair of trendy stores and hairstylist Ruth had dyed the locks of three Vancouver Canucks platinum blond for the 2001 first-round Stanley Cup playoffs.
Today, 45-year-old Bafaro sits in jail in Washington state facing drug-smuggling charges. He’s been named in court documents as the ringleader in a plan to hike into the U.S. carrying backpacks stuffed with B.C. bud. He was arrested, along with four other men, on April 26."

Brand blames late fame on heroin | Celebrities | Entertainment | London Free Press

Brand blames late fame on heroin Celebrities Entertainment London Free Press: "Comic Russell Brand is convinced his rise to stardom was delayed because his addiction to heroin stopped him taking his career seriously.
The funnyman landed a series of major acting roles after appearing in 2007's St Trinian's, starring in films including Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Bedtime Stories.
And Brand is convinced he could have reached international fame earlier if he hadn't become hooked on drugs.
He tells Britain's The Sun, 'If you're addicted to heroin it takes up an awful lot of your time. You have to get the heroin, take the heroin, fall asleep because of the heroin, then more heroin. So I think I was unable to (become famous) because I was involved in a lot of other time-consuming things. I think that's the simple answer.
'I was a petty criminal and drug addict for a long while and if you're a drug addict it's very difficult to succeed in anything'."

Wave of cheap 'black tar' heroin that can kill instantly spreads across America | Mail Online

Wave of cheap 'black tar' heroin that can kill instantly spreads across America Mail Online: "potent wave of cheap heroin which can kill users before they pull the syringe from their veins is spreading across America.
Drug smugglers are selling the ‘black tar’ substance for as little as £7 ($10) a bag, raising concerns that its cost will widen its appeal with addicts.The heroin – named for its dark, gooey consistency – which is being grown in Mexico and Colombia and taken to the U.S., is so pure, it can kill unsuspecting users instantly."

Police: Cocaine cutting agent sending users to hospital - BostonHerald.com

Police: Cocaine cutting agent sending users to hospital - BostonHerald.com: "Police are warning that a chemical used to deworm animals is being added to cocaine and causing users to be hospitalized, reports the Portsmouth Herald.
City police were contacted by officials from a Boston-area hospital over the weekend and warned that multiple patients were showing up with adverse reactions to cocaine laced with levamisole, said Sgt. Mike Schwartz. The hospital reported patients were being treated “and they have a connection to Portsmouth,” he said.
“They called us for a reason,” said Schwartz, while declining to elaborate because an investigation is ongoing."

The Associated Press: AP IMPACT: Deadly, ultra-pure heroin arrives in US

The Associated Press: AP IMPACT: Deadly, ultra-pure heroin arrives in US: "Mexican drug smugglers are increasingly peddling a form of ultra-potent heroin that sells for as little as $10 a bag and is so pure it can kill unsuspecting users instantly, sometimes before they even remove the syringe from their veins.
An Associated Press review of drug overdose data shows that so-called 'black tar' heroin — named for its dark, gooey consistency — and other forms of the drug are contributing to a spike in overdose deaths across the nation and attracting a new generation of users who are caught off guard by its potency."

Big rise in cocaine use in Victoria as the price drops to $20 | Herald Sun

Big rise in cocaine use in Victoria as the price drops to $20 Herald Sun: "VICTORIA is in the grip of a cocaine boom with a hit of the drug now cheaper at $20 than a footy ticket. Federal authorities are reporting increased seizures, but experts also believe more cocaine is arriving undetected as crime gangs use planes, mules and cargo ships to smuggle in the drug.
Cocaine is now one of the only illicit drugs rising in use, with an estimated 69,000 Victorians taking it in a recent 12-month period.
An estimated quarter of a million Victorians have tried the dangerous drug.
And according to the United Nations, Australia's cocaine use is rising at a greater rate than that of South America."

BBC News - Police seize contraband worth £3m

BBC News - Police seize contraband worth £3m: "Fake goods and illegally imported cigarettes and alcohol worth £3m have been recovered during a police raid in Glasgow.
Officers working with HM Revenue and Customs and trading standards officials made the find at business premises in Commerce Street on Thursday.
It included imported alcohol, tobacco and fake designer clothing and jewellery.
A large amount of cash was also seized under the Proceeds of Crime Act.
Det Ch Insp John McDonald, of Strathclyde Police, said: 'As a result of an intelligence-led proactive operation, premises were identified and searched, resulting in the recovery of a substantial quantity of alcohol, cigarettes and counterfeit clothing and jewellery."

thunderstorm raging over Jamaica

thunderstorm raging over Jamaica that threatens to capsize the island's already hobbled economy and put its government in a diplomatic quandary with the United States. Last August, the U.S. Department of Justice issued an extradition warrant for the arrest of Christopher "Dudus" Coke, reputed don of West Kingston's infamous Tivoli Gardens garrison. Coke, counted among the "world's most dangerous narcotics kingpins" by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), has been charged with conspiracy to traffic firearms and to distribute marijuana and cocaine.




To date, Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding has ignored increasing local and U.S. pressure to sign the extradition warrant, citing breach of Jamaican law in obtaining the wiretapped evidence and the protection of its citizens to due process. But this is no ordinary citizen.



The tentacles of Coke's power and influence stretch across Jamaica and in to the upper echelons of the current government. The community Coke controls is a notorious stronghold of the ruling Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) and is Prime Minister Golding's constituency; his defense attorney, Senator Tom Tavares-Finson, is a member of Parliament.



More than a diplomatic stalemate, the David-and-Goliath showdown threatens to expose the corruption that for decades has been intrinsic to Jamaican politics. Moreover, it underscores the reality that politics and criminal gangs remain intricately linked in both political parties. The ongoing diplomatic stalemate has vast repercussions for the popular tourist destination, which relies heavily on U.S. support and magnanimity in the form of exports, tourism and remittances.



Then, a bombshell: A Washington Post article reported that last November, prominent U.S. law firm Manatt, Phelps and Phillips received nearly $50,000, an installment toward a $400,000 contract, to lobby on behalf of the government of Jamaica against Coke's extradition.



The agreement was signed by Manatt partner Susan Schmidt and Kingston lawyer Harold Brady, who claimed he was "authorized on behalf of the government of Jamaica" to make the deal and attended by Daryl Vaz, Jamaica's Minister of Information. The agreement violates the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA), because of the firm's failure to declare the purpose and extent of their lobbying efforts and because Coke financed the contract.



Though records filed by Manatt under FARA regulations state that only "treaty issues" were discussed, White House officials confirm that conversations were primarily focused on Jamaica's opposition to extraditing Coke. In the ensuing furor, Prime Minister Golding has denied that anyone was authorized to act on the government's behalf, and the law firm has since "ceased activities on behalf of the Government of Jamaica." But questions remain, foremost among them: Who has the power to broker and finance such a deal and why?



It is all anyone, cab drivers, businessmen, nurses, vendors, speaks of on the island. As testament to his power and reach, though, almost no one will speak on record -- not university professors, journalists, friends or the man on the street -- and inquiries are met with dead-eyed stares and disconnected phone lines. A palpable tension hovers over downtown Kingston and across the island, a restless disquiet.



Impenetrable to outsiders, the entrances to downtown garrisons are barricaded with cement boulders, tires and old iron. They're patrolled by steely eyed boy-men with automatic weapons hanging at their sides, fingers not far from the trigger. Ghetto passes do not suffice here, and curiosity is answered with a strident "Who you?" Coke's supporters - who are legion - insist he will not go without a fight, and rumors are rampant about his preparedness.



Garrison communities - Tivoli, Trench Town, Jungle, Fletcher's Land and others - are self-governing, politically protected enclaves striated according to party affiliation, dependent on and controlled by "dons" and their gangs, who are the liaison between the community and political parties. Dons receive the patronage and political protection of party leaders, which insulates them from law enforcement. In exchange, they finance political campaigns, deliver votes, wage wars to protect territories and maintain peace overall.



Despite their reputation for criminality and corruption, many dons benefit enormously from government contracts for construction, transportation and infrastructure, and, in turn, utilize these legal businesses to launder money. They fill a gap that successive governments seem unable and unwilling to tackle.



In point, Coke has been instrumental in resurrecting, restructuring and streamlining commerce and ensuring the safety and protection of both vendors and buyers in downtown Kingston. Now, business transactions and social interactions (such as the popular dancehall event, Passa Passa) are mutually beneficial, and money flows in to poverty-stricken communities that are unlikely to benefit from tourist dollars or government subsidies.



He's also managed to stem much of the violence and terror for which these areas are historically renowned. But this peace comes at a steep price: There is no business that operates without paying up to a don's henchmen--from established businesses and storefronts to produce sellers in the markets. Refusal means arson, intimidation and the threat of violence with no legal recourse.



Politicians have ceded their power to gangsters and appear unable or unwilling to mitigate the chaos they helped create since they began arming the gangs of inner city Kingston and beyond. As the deadlock tightens, Jamaicans are fearful of the return to and breakout of violence and what will flourish in the vacuum created by his extradition.



Jamaicans are a famously proud people who balk at the notion of bowing to anything and anyone, but many are bitterly angry at and exasperated by the putrid odor of decades-long corruption, which they feel sullies the island's image across the world. No matter the resolution, in the bitter aftermath, the unbearable price will be paid by regular Jamaicans struggling to eke out a living.



The U.S. Sharpens Its Tools



The flailing began with Jamaica's prominence in the 2010 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, which lays bare the country's many transgressions. The report turns the spotlight on the "unusual handling of [Coke's] extradition request" and notes the "dramatic change in Jamaica's previous cooperation on extradition," including a temporary suspension in the processing of all other pending requests, which it says raises serious questions about the country's commitment to combating transnational crime.



Damningly, the report highlights the "guns for ganja" trade and labels the island "the Caribbean's largest source of marijuana" for the United States and "a transit point for cocaine trafficked from South America," and cites its "high murder rate per capita--1,672 in 2009, one of the highest in the world." It expresses concern over "the increasing activity of organized crime, which permeates the legitimate business sector as well as the political sector, and its impact on Jamaica's political and economic stability."



Despite assertions by the U.S. charge 'd'affaires to Jamaica, Isaiah Parnell, that ties remain strong between the countries, Washington is growing weary of waiting and skeptical of the government's political will. Despite Prime Minister Golding's assertions that efforts are being made to strengthen bilateral cooperation to stem the tide of illegal guns and drugs, anticorruption and anticrime legislation still languishes in Parliament.



To date, the United States has yet to appoint an ambassador to Jamaica, and recently, the visas of several prominent entertainers and businessmen have been revoked without warning. Many citizens are worried that U.S. visas will not be granted or renewed.



What options lay ahead for Coke, who resides in a storied mansion in the verdant suburbs of Kingston, miles away from the congested slums he purportedly commands? His father, feared JLP strongman Lloyd Lester "Jim Brown" Coke, JLP enforcer and leader of the Shower Posse -- that for over a decade funneled drugs and guns through the U.S. and Jamaica -- also found himself in the same predicament. Coke Sr. died in a mysterious fire in his cell at the General Penitentiary on the eve of his own extradition in February 1991.



Currently, the political foot dragging continues before the Jamaica Supreme Court. Jamaica Attorney General Dorothy Lightbourne has filed a motion seeking a declaration on the handling of the extradition request for Coke. A hearing is set for May 5th.



As the high stakes game of chicken continues, a country waits: anxious, vigilant, hopeful.

Jamaican government has agreed to extradite drug suspect, Christopher "Dudus" Coke and a manhunt is currently underway,

Jamaican government has agreed to extradite drug suspect, Christopher "Dudus" Coke and a manhunt is currently underway, which could result in a massive standoff, as police attempt to apprehend him in Jamaica. The case has caused turmoil in Jamaica, as the Jamaican government contends, the U.S. Department of Justice, headed by Obama's reckless Attorney General, Eric Holder, illegally wiretapped Coke's mobile phone, in a bid to gain evidence for an extradition.




Many Jamaicans have complained, when the extradition hit a snag, due to the illegal wiretaps being rejected as evidence, as retaliation, the U.S. government began arresting Jamaicans in America for the least little thing, such as traffic violations which were previously not considered arrest worthy offenses, canceling the visas of Jamaicans in America and denying Jamaican businesspeople entry into the United States for standard business trips.

Danish police seize large amount of heroin - Taiwan News Online

Danish police seize large amount of heroin - Taiwan News Online: "Danish police say they have made one of the largest heroin seizures in the country's history, estimating its value to be at least 5 million kroner ($800,000).
Police spokesman Brian Voss Olsen says Wednesday's heroin find consisted of 18.7 pounds (8.5 kilograms) of the drug. Police also found 8.75 ounces (250 grams) of cocaine in the raid.
Voss Olsen said Thursday the seizure was the biggest ever made in Aarhus, Denmark's second largest city.
Four people aged between 18 and 59, have been arrested."

Couple allegedly shooting heroin in their car | - lehighvalleylive.com

Couple allegedly shooting heroin in their car - lehighvalleylive.com: "Bethlehem police said a pair of Whitehall Township residents were shooting heroin Wednesday afternoon in a car parked at the Perkins restaurant on the South Side. Jeffrey Buss, 25, and Adrienne Flores, 22, were in the process of using heroin at 4:43 p.m. in their car when spotted by police, according to Lt. Mark DiLuzio. Buss had a tourniquet on one of his arms and a needle and heroin were in plain sight inside the car, police allege"

Arrest warrant issued for Lindsay Lohan - People - MiamiHerald.com

Arrest warrant issued for Lindsay Lohan - People - MiamiHerald.com: "judge issued an arrest warrant for the beleaguered actress after she missed a mandatory Thursday morning court hearing in Beverly Hills.
Lohan is stuck in Cannes, France, where her lawyer says her passport was stolen.
Funny, TMZ reports French police say no report was filed, contradicting mom Dina.
True or not, it's a flimsy excuse.
``She should have made sure she either didn't go to Cannes or made sure to be back two days earlier,'' said Superior Court Judge"

Chocolate truffles stuffed with cocaine seized at New York airport

Chocolate truffles stuffed with $500,000 of cocaine seized at New York airport "stash of Ferrero Rocher chocolate truffles was seized at a New York airport - because they were stuffed with $500,000 worth of cocaine.

Officials at JFK Airport arrested U.S. citizen Robert Lopera when he arrived on a flight from Colombia with the drugs concealed inside chocolates and nuts.

Lopera was arrested after a total of 15lbs of cocaine was seized by customs on 11 May. Haul: A stash of chocolate truffles was seized at a New York airport because they were stuffed with $500,000 worth of cocaineThe U.S. citizen was first stopped when the bag of candies he was carrying seemed heavy, according to officials.Balls of cocaine were discovered covered with chocolate and nut-sized cubes of the drug were found inside pistachio shells, police said.'CBP officers remain vigilant when conducting enforcement exams,' Robert E Perez of Customs and Border Protection's New York office told NBC.Lopera is expected to be be arraigned in Brooklyn federal court on drug trafficking charges.Ferrero Rocher chocolates became popular in the UK during the 1990s thanks to a series of TV adverts set at a party in a European ambassador's official residence.The lines 'Eccellente' and 'Monsieur, with these Rocher, you're really spoiling us' quickly passed into popular culture."

Family disappointed by appeal delays | National | BigPond News

Family disappointed by appeal delays National BigPond News: "family of Bali nine drug mule Martin Stephens has been disappointed by further delay to his final appeal against his life sentence.
The key evidence that underpins the 33-year-old Wollongong man's final appeal a letter from former Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty that describes stephens as a minor player in the
heroin smuggling plot was formally submitted to the Denpasar District Court today."

WBFO: Toronto doctor charged in Buffalo for alleged role in drug smuggling incident (2010-05-18)

WBFO: Toronto doctor charged in Buffalo for alleged role in drug smuggling incident (2010-05-18): "Toronto doctor was charged by the US Attorney's office in Buffalo Tuesday for his alleged role in a drug smuggling incident at the Peace Bridge.
Dr. Anthony Galea, 51, faces several felony counts, including aiding and abetting smuggling and making a false statement.
His former assistant was arrested at the Peace Bridge last September after several banned substances were found in her car.
Galea is a prominent sports physician who has treated such athletes as Alex Rodriguez and Tiger Woods. He's charged with providing human growth hormone (HGH) to one ex-NFL player.
The complaint also charges the doctor with introducing the unapproved drug actovegin into interstate commerce."

Channing Tatum to Star in What's Left of Us as Heroin Addict

Channing Tatum to Star in What's Left of Us as Heroin Addict: "seems that hard-earned physique that made Channing Tatum famous in movies like G.I. Joe and Step Up may be a thing of the past for his new movie role. In What's Left of Us, Tatum will star as a heroin addict on a seven-day detox.
Tatum only gets to show off his acting skills pretty sparingly these days (that crying scene in Dear John being an exception), so it'll be nice to see the beefy, love-him-or-hate-him actor attempting a challenge."

Iceland Review Online: Daily News from Iceland, Current Affairs, Business, Politics, Sports, Culture

Iceland Review Online: Daily News from Iceland, Current Affairs, Business, Politics, Sports, Culture: "The investigation is taking place in cooperation with Dutch police authorities in relation to the confiscation of three tons of marijuana in the Netherlands, Fréttabladid reports.
Police dogs were used to search the sailboat and divers searched the harbor in Seydisfjördur. Samples of paint were taken from the sailboat to see whether it had rubbed against other vessels to deliver or receive smuggled goods.
The boat is damaged; the hinder mast is broken and one of the sides is scratched. It is unknown whether any substances were found onboard.
Karl Steinar Valsson, the senior officer at the capital region police’s drug department, would not comment on the investigation for the time being."

Laws, Life, and Legal Matters - Court Cases and Legal Information at Leagle.com - All Federal and State Appeals Court Cases in One Search

Laws, Life, and Legal Matters - Court Cases and Legal Information at Leagle.com - All Federal and State Appeals Court Cases in One Search: "Pickett opined the crime would have benefitted both the Rollin' 60s gang and the individual Rollin' 60s member himself. The gang member would gain respect and stature in the gang hierarchy for his willingness to commit a violent crime for the gang. If the robbery had been successful, both the gang member and the gang would have benefitted monetarily. The gang would also benefit because this kind of crime helps to create 'fear and intimidation within the community. Gang members can't work without it.' It also helps in the recruitment of new gang members who want to be associated with a gang 'known as . . . the meanest, baddest, and ugliest one in the neighborhood . . . .'"

wgrz.com | Buffalo, NY | HGH Smuggling Investigation; Why Athletes Are Attracted To Substance

wgrz.com Buffalo, NY HGH Smuggling Investigation; Why Athletes Are Attracted To Substance: "Several professional athletes have been tied to a performance-enhancing drug smuggling investigation that originated in Western New York, according to multiple sources.
Multiple sources with knowledge of the investigation tell 2 On Your Side around a dozen NFL and MLB players have been interviewed by Federal authorities investigating HGH smuggling from Canada into the U.S.
Our sources were not certain if any of the NFL players currently play, or have ever played, for the Buffalo Bills. The players are witnesses in the case, not suspects, according to our sources."

The TaxPayers' Alliance - Media Coverage: Daily Express: Police plan to give Heroin junkies free needles

The TaxPayers' Alliance - Media Coverage: Daily Express: Police plan to give Heroin junkies free needles: "PROPOSAL for police to give heroin addicts advice and free needles to inject the drug safely sparked outrage last night.
Under the scheme, junkies will receive so-called Harm Reduction Kits of clean needles, a clinical waste container and a manual about the most effective dose and the right veins to inject.
The drug users are to be given the packs when released from custody in a bid to stop them killing themselves.
The scheme will get underway in Cambridgeshire next month.But last night there was outrage that police appeared to be encouraging the use of the deadly class A drug.
Monmouth MP David Davies said: “I am astonished by this initiative. My understanding is that it is the police’s job to catch drug dealers and possession of drugs is also against the law. We should get drug users off the streets and if necessary force them to get medical help to combat their addiction.”
Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “This is sending out mixed messages about drug use. The authorities should make their mind up whether they think drugs should be banned or not.” Former Home Office minister and Daily Express columnist Ann Widdecombe said: “We should be preventing heroin use, not sanitising the use of the drug."

New therapy for cocaine toxicity: Enzyme break downs cocaine into inactive products nearly 1,000 times faster than human body does | New Science Magazine

New therapy for cocaine toxicity: Enzyme break downs cocaine into inactive products nearly 1,000 times faster than human body does New Science Magazine: "Researchers have developed and tested a modified enzyme that can break down cocaine into inactive products nearly 1,000 times faster than the human body does regularly. The engineered enzyme, called CocE, may be an excellent candidate for clinical use"

Recovering drug user faces prison - Hartlepool Mail

Recovering drug user faces prison - Hartlepool Mail: "RECOVERING drug user who was caught with cannabis and amphetamine will have his case heard before a judge after he breached a crown court order. Hartlepool man Jason Darren Cooper could be sent to prison for 44 weeks after being caught with the drugs in the street and breaching a suspended sentence.
Police stopped Cooper at 3pm in the town's Chester Road and he handed them a small wrap of cannabis.
A court heard officers became suspicious as the 37-year-old looked 'visibly shaken' and looked in his wallet, which contained a small wrap of white powder which was later identified as amphetamine"

Daily Herald | Oswego man traded fatal dose of heroin for guitar, police say

Daily Herald Oswego man traded fatal dose of heroin for guitar, police say: "traded the dead man heroin for a guitar.
Crystal Lake police arrested Mark S. Seranella, 21, at his Oswego home on a charge of drug-induced homicide, a Class X felony which, if he is convicted, could land him in prison for up to 30 years.
The charge stems from the Jan. 26, 2007 discovery of Ryan A. Maxwell, of the 1500 block of Birmingham Lane in Crystal Lake, dead from a heroin overdose in a friend's apartment."

Sheriff: Man had 68 balloons full of heroin | San Francisco Examiner

Sheriff: Man had 68 balloons full of heroin San Francisco Examiner: "Authorities say a man was found with 68 balloons full of heroin after he crashed his truck his Duarte.
Los Angeles County sheriff's Lt. Tom McNeal says 27-year-old Andrew Lalande had apparently fallen asleep Friday and crashed into a car that was stopped in front of him.
Witnesses say Lalande got out of the truck after the crash, walked down the street, appeared to drop something on the ground, then returned to his truck.
Deputies later found 68 balloons full of heroin at the spot witnesses pointed out. They also found 15 syringes, one of them full of heroin, inside Lalande's truck."

Former Drug Kingpin Ike Atkinson Challenges "American Gangster" Frank Lucas with Release of "Sergeant Smack"

Former Drug Kingpin Ike Atkinson Challenges "American Gangster" Frank Lucas with Release of "Sergeant Smack": "Raleigh, North Carolina - In April of 2007, 84-year old Ike Atkinson was released from federal prison after serving a 32-year prison term. There were no cameras and little fanfare as the man deemed the biggest American drug kingpin ever to operate out of Asia was set free. Atkinson, who operated the largest drug smuggling enterprise in the 1970s"

Doing Coke With Jack Nicholson - The Daily Beast

Doing Coke With Jack Nicholson - The Daily Beast: "Robert Downey Jr. says his drug addiction started early, alleging in an upcoming issue of Rolling Stone that his father, Robert Downey Sr., began giving him drugs when he was 8 years old. Downey Jr. also recounts doing cocaine with his dad and Jack Nicholson, and talks about how he got involved with heroin. 'All those years of snorting coke, and then I accidentally get involved in heroin after smoking crack for the first time. It finally tied my shoelaces together,' he said. Downey has been sober for seven years, and says he plans to stay that way."

Russia's war on drugs: tackling heroin problem means going back to Afghanistan - Telegraph

Russia's war on drugs: tackling heroin problem means going back to Afghanistan - Telegraph: "tens of thousands of drug-related deaths in Russia each year. Sveta Makhnenko could easily have been one of that number
Sveta has vague memories of finding herself on the floor, her nose broken, her limbs numb, intolerable pain pinching every single muscle of her skinny body. As her consciousness cleared, as if somebody turned the light on, a nurse said: 'This one will pass away by tomorrow morning. Let's not even bother moving her to the ward.'"

Injecting drug use is driving the fastest-growing Aids epidemic in the world

Injecting drug use is driving the fastest-growing Aids epidemic in the world. It's happening in eastern Europe. The number of HIV-infected people in Russia, for instance, has grown tenfold over the past decade from around 100,000 to one million, most of whom are under the age of 30.

heroin prescribing on the NHS

Dr Peter Carter, of the Royal College of Nursing, has spoken approvingly of heroin prescribing on the NHS. This sounds shocking, perhaps. All I can do is gently point out that every trial ever done on diamorphine prescribing has shown it to work well in restoring previously hopeless addicts to being effective members of society. Their health improves dramatically. They give up crime. They get jobs.
Besides, many opioid addicts can’t stand methadone, the current preferred treatment. It rots teeth and can be generally burdensome. If you give addicts free heroin you remove at a stroke their principle motive for committing theft or going into prostitution.
It has shown excellent outcomes in trials in Europe and recently in Canada , though the Americans are adamantly opposed to heroin and will not even use it in medicine. Very often what happens in practice is that addicts get bored of prescribed medication and give up altogether on a prescription.
So maybe we should think the unthinkable. At the very least policy must be grounded in evidence, not in prejudice. Substitute prescribing is accepted in tobacco addiction. Why not heroin?

Oregon prosecutors demand 'zero tolerance' for drugs at Reed College | OregonLive.com

Oregon prosecutors demand 'zero tolerance' for drugs at Reed College OregonLive.com: "Four top Oregon prosecutors have put Reed College on notice that they want a 'zero-tolerance' policy for all illegal drugs -- including marijuana -- on the famously nonconformist campus."

Heroin in Western Massachusetts: Drug's popularity linked to death, crime | Massachusetts Local News - MassLive.com

Heroin in Western Massachusetts: Drug's popularity linked to death, crime Massachusetts Local News - MassLive.com: "Sara J. Seymour knows the horrors of heroin addiction firsthand. The drug caused Seymour to lose her job and a place to live. But, the worst loss, says the 18-year-old, was the death of her boyfriend, who hanged himself in jail earlier this year after an arrest for heroin possession.
“It just brings you down a bad road,” said Seymour recently."

Did Michael Douglas' Son Get Celeb Treatment With Reduced Sentence? - E! Online

Did Michael Douglas' Son Get Celeb Treatment With Reduced Sentence? - E! Online: "Michael Douglas' son was sentenced to five years in prison today, just half of what is otherwise (like, for offenders without famous relatives) a minimum—yes, minimum—10-year term. But earlier today all parties agreed, on the record, that Douglas was not bound by mandatory minimums because he cooperated with authorities."

The Associated Press: Michael Douglas' son is sentenced to 5-year term

The Associated Press: Michael Douglas' son is sentenced to 5-year term: "sentenced Michael Douglas' son to five years in prison on drug charges, calling it his 'last chance to make it.'
Federal Judge Richard Berman announced the sentence Tuesday after hearing Cameron Douglas apologize and admit that he had squandered a lot of opportunities to turn his life around.
The judge said earlier that he did not have confidence that Douglas would turn his back on drugs after pleading guilty in January to drug charges.
The troubled 31-year-old son of the Academy Award-winning actor admitted to dealing methamphetamine and cocaine. He had faced a 10-year term."

Jersey user reveals mephedrone dangers » News » This Is Jersey

Jersey user reveals mephedrone dangers » News » This Is Jersey: "shocking and dangerous effects of the dance drug mephedrone have been revealed by a user in Jersey for the first time.
The 29-year-old man wants to warn Islanders that they risk catching deadly viruses such as HIV, from sharing the same ‘snorting’ device, as well as turning violent and paranoid after taking the drug.
In an interview published in today’s JEP, he also revealed that Islanders are ordering the drug, which is illegal in Jersey, over the internet and posting it to places where they can pick it up without being traced."

Gazette Live - News - Local News - Three arrested in first mephedrone drug raids

Gazette Live - News - Local News - Three arrested in first mephedrone drug raids: "– Nightingale Road in Eston and West Dyke Road in Redcar.
The three people arrested from Nightingale Road are two women aged 40 and 25 and a 24-year-old man, all on suspicion of possession with intent to supply Class B drugs.
A quantity of what are believed to be Class B drugs were seized with paraphernalia and a quantity of cash.
All were taken into custody and are helping with inquiries at Middlesbrough Police HQ.
Det Inspector Dave Mead, of Redcar and Cleveland Police, led the operation.
He said: “Our message is we’re cracking down hard - and will continue to do so.”"

Former Mexican President Fox Advocates Legalizing Prohibited Drugs | AHN

Former Mexican President Fox Advocates Legalizing Prohibited Drugs AHN: "Former Mexican President Vicente Fox this week suggested legalizing the kinds of drugs that have prompted violence among smugglers and police along the border with the United States"

This is Not Your Typical Prison Book | Criminal Justice | Change.org

This is Not Your Typical Prison Book Criminal Justice Change.org: "Piper Kerman thought she had left her brief, tangential connection to an international drug ring safely in the past. She had severed ties with the group of charming, jet-setting smugglers she'd known in the early 1990s, and was working in New York as a communications professional. She was engaged to be married. But in 1998, that changed when police rang Kerman’s buzzer. Suddenly, she was off to federal prison.
In her new memoir, Orange is the New Black"

Daily Herald | 'Dial-A-Rock' arrests show cocaine's popularity in the suburbs

Daily Herald 'Dial-A-Rock' arrests show cocaine's popularity in the suburbs: "cocaine is still king.
It's cheap, easy to distribute and as popular as ever as this week's 'Dial-A-Rock' drug bust show, according to drug enforcement authorities.
For the past 10 years, the drug ring distributed cocaine in small amounts all over the Northwest suburbs from a stash house in Schaumburg.
'It's cheap, a quick fix costs about $40,' said Cmdr. Ken Galinski of the Arlington Heights Police Department. 'We see a lot of cocaine and marijuana arrests around here.'
Will Taylor, a special agent with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, said cocaine has been a suburban problem for decades."

Lennon’s LSD stash ‘discovered’ - Touching The Void

Lennon’s LSD stash ‘discovered’ - Touching The Void: "stash of drugs John Lennon supposedly buried in his garden in 1967. The rock legend is said to have dug a hole for a vast quantity of LSD at Kenwood, in Weybridge, Surrey only to then forget where he'd put them, leaving the illegal bounty hidden underground forever.
It has now emerged that a group of builders working at the estate, where Lennon lived between 1964 and 1968, have made an amazing and potentially decisive discovery while digging up the lawn. They are reported to have found a leather holdall containing several large, broken glass bottles, plus one that has not smashed."

Signs Of Heroin Addiction | TreatmentForHeroin.net

Signs Of Heroin Addiction TreatmentForHeroin.net: "Heroin is a narcotic and an illegal drug that is typically injected or snorted by users though it can be smoked. The manner in which the drug, from the opiates family, is ingested has little bearing on the potential for addiction. The fact is that repeated use leads to addiction, whether you are using needles or not.
What is Heroin Addiction Pennsylvania?
A person who is a heroin addict continues to use the drug, even though they are experiencing negative consequences in their life as a result. They are not able to choose whether they are going to use heroin. Instead, they experience a “need” for it that becomes a driving force in their life.
Signs of Heroin Dependence Pennsylvania
Heroin addicts have similar experiences when they have become dependent on the drug, including:"

Maria Clyne's story of how alcohol affected her health | Mail Online

Maria Clyne's story of how alcohol affected her health Mail Online: "Alcohol had been a constant feature in Maria Clyne's career as an IT trainer. Drink-fuelled lunches were followed by after-work bottles of wine and lazy Sundays were whiled away in the pub. Throughout her 30s, alcohol was the crutch that saw her through the breakdown of her marriage. But for Maria, the amount she drank was to have devastating consequences. At the age of 38, having suffered from irregular periods for five years, she discovered she had experienced an early menopause, a fact that her doctor said was most likely caused, and without doubt contributed to, by her binge-drinking. At her lowest point she was drinking two bottles of wine a day - 18 units, when the recommended weekly limit is 14 units. 'When I look back at my younger self, I want to take her by the shoulders and shake her,' says Maria, 42, now a practising addiction specialist based on London's Harley Street.
'I used to think getting drunk all the time was fun, I used to think it was just what young women did with their lives. 'From the time I turned 30, you could see the damage alcohol was doing to my body in terms of my skin being dry and blotchy, and I often felt exhausted and"

BBCW: Heroin Use Up in Missouri: Maybe Governor Jay Nixon Will Issue a Heroin Use Guide like NYC's

BBCW: Heroin Use Up in Missouri: Maybe Governor Jay Nixon Will Issue a Heroin Use Guide like NYC's: "Heroin treatment centers in Missouri have seen a 51% increase in heroin cases in Missouri over the last few years. Heroin death cases in Missouri rose 66% in 2007 and 2008. The DEA believes the problem has stretched far beyond the St. Louis city and metropolitan area.

Of course, much if this is coming across the border from Mexico, which once was a hot bed for cocaine trafficking, but heroine is easier to come by these days. Interstate 44 has become a major artery of drug trafficking leading the drugs to Chicago."

Corby applies for clemency citing depression

Corby applies for clemency citing depression: "Australian Schapelle Corby, serving a 20-year jail term in Indonesia for drug smuggling, has applied for presidential clemency, saying she is suffering from depression that could endanger her life.
Corby was convicted in May 2005 of smuggling marijuana onto the resort island of Bali.
A registrar at the Denpasar District Court on Monday said that Corby had filed a clemency application late last month citing her poor mental state and asking for her sentenced to be reduced.
Clemency decisions in Indonesian can take months."

The Canadian Press: Quebec health officials warn of lethal mix of cocaine, anti-parasite drug

The Canadian Press: Quebec health officials warn of lethal mix of cocaine, anti-parasite drug: "warning that cocaine cut with an anti-parasitic medication is hitting the streets in the province and can cause a severe adverse reaction in illicit drug users.
The pharmaceutical levamisole - most commonly used by veterinarians to treat worm infestations-has been cropping up in the U.S. and Canada as a common adulterant to cut cocaine for street level consumption.
Use of the anti-parasitic drug by humans can cause nausea, dizziness and diarrhoea and - with repeated exposure - can lead to a reduced white blood cell count and a suppressed immune system.
The dangerous mix can also cause high blood pressure and an irregular heartbeat.
Last November, U.S. health authorities launched a health alert about the dangers of the blend after finding some 70 per cent of cocaine tested by drug enforcement authorities in July 2009 was positive for levamisole.
In a Quebec study, the public health institute found the presence of levamisole in eight out of ten blood samples taken from known drug users.
Cases have also cropped up in Alberta, Ontario and British Columbia."

The Growth of the Heroin Trade in Afghanistan: How Afghanistan and the Golden Crescent Supply the World with Heroin

The Growth of the Heroin Trade in Afghanistan: How Afghanistan and the Golden Crescent Supply the World with Heroin: "Afghanistan has become known in recent years as the heroin capital of the world. The notorious Helmand Province alone produces enough heroin to meet almost half of global demand, and Afghanistan as a whole supplies 92% of the world's opiates. In 2008, it's estimated that 8,200 tonnes of heroin was cultivated and processed in the country, which has a 'farmgate' value of around a billion dollars. This is around double the amount of heroin the country was producing just three years previously."

Bill to legalize medical use of marijuana advances in Senate - baltimoresun.com

Bill to legalize medical use of marijuana advances in Senate - baltimoresun.com: "bill that would legalize medical marijuana.

Senators backed a procedural move on Friday that will allow a final vote on the measure.

The proposal would allow pharmacies to distribute marijuana to patients who receive authorization from a physician with whom they have had ongoing medical relationships. It would also re-categorize marijuana as a highly regulated pain medication like morphine instead of keeping it in the same category of drugs like heroin.

The bill has bipartisan support. An aide to House Speaker Michael Busch says members of a House group studying a similar bill will probably hold it for review during the months before next year's session, meaning the measure is not likely to become law this year."

more than 900000 Afghans are hooked on heroin



While Afghanistan is blamed for the vast majority of heroin that’s trafficked around the world, the level of addiction at home is a growing problem. Official figures show more than 900000 Afghans are hooked on heroin, and nearly a quarter of those addicts are women and children. Alan Fisher reports from Kabul on a new clinic dedicating its efforts to helping women and girls get clean. – world news

close down methadone treatment the community can anticipate more overdose deaths, more HIV and more crime.

methadone should be readily available to all addicts seeking help.

If policymakers were to heed the critics' advice to close down methadone treatment the community can anticipate more overdose deaths, more HIV and more crime.
Letter to The Scotsman
International panel of experts
The group - which includes university professors and doctors who treat addicts - wrote in the letter: "No treatment in medicine works every time but methadone treatment has helped more people in the world overcome their problems with heroin than any other."
It went on: "If policy makers were to heed the critics' advice to close down methadone treatment or impose an arbitrary time limit on its administration, the community can anticipate more overdose deaths, more HIV and more crime."
The letter is a response to comments from Professor Neil McKeganey, director of the Centre for Drug Misuse Research at the University of Glasgow, who said last week more effort was needed to get people off drugs, including methadone, through abstinence.
Professor McKeganey has defended his views and claimed the signatories to the letter did not understand the extent of the drugs problem in Scotland, where 22,000 addicts are on methadone.
State of dependency
He said: "Much of the methadone programme in Scotland is not about getting people off, it's about continuing them in a state of dependency."
He claimed there were now parts of Scotland where there were more addict deaths associated with methadone than heroin.
"We don't see the evidence of stabilised addicts. You walk around the streets, you see people in the most desperate of circumstances."
But the man who organised the letter in The Scotsman, Dr Roy Robertson from the Royal College of General Practitioners in Scotland, said removing methadone would cause many more problems.
He told BBC Scotland: "A decrease in availability of methadone would give rise to all sorts of things - increasing sudden deaths, blood-borne virus spread, HIV infection, hepatitis C infection and all that social problem area that ends up with people in custody, and causes violence and criminality.
"There's a huge amount of unhappiness for people and their families and lives and communities blighted and devastated by the problems related to drug use."
The letter in The Scotsman ends by calling on policymakers to be clear about the value and importance of methadone treatment.

Cocaine vs. Amphetamine



Concerned workers at the National Primate Research Center said Bobo, a 5-year-old chimpanzee participating in a 16-month cocaine study, was observed this week lying to the faces of friends, family, and staff.

Concerned workers at the National Primate Research Center said Bobo, a 5-year-old chimpanzee participating in a 16-month cocaine study, was observed this week lying to the faces of friends, family, and staff.
"Our goal was to determine how large doses of the stimulant would improve or impair the chimpanzee's ability to perform memory and language tasks," said primatologist Daniel Martin, the project's lead researcher. "What we found was that cocaine not only disrupted Bobo's concentration and recall, but it also caused him to lie, cheat, and emotionally manipulate those around him."
Continued Martin, "Essentially, Bobo has become an asshole."
According to researchers, initial results of the study were promising, with Bobo energetically completing cognition tests in record times.
Within weeks, however, he reportedly began to develop violent mood swings, delusions of grandeur, and other troubling behaviors, such as begging his fellow participants to let him take their place in line so he could score a double dose of the drug he craved.
Enlarge ImageA researcher chronicles Bobo's descent into thievery and lies.
Witnesses said that once Bobo began taking advantage of the chimps in his life, family and friends further enabled his behavior by always giving him "one last chance."
"How many times can Bobo aggressively lash out at them, become contrite, act sorrowful, and then lash out again before they realize he has a problem?" research assistant Karen Grant said. "His life is spinning out of control, and they need to confront him about it. If they don't, one day they'll find him facedown under the tire swing—dead from an overdose."
By the third week of the study, Bobo had turned to theft to feed his growing habit: The addicted primate was observed stealing bananas from his loved ones, lying about it, and then attempting to conceal his misdeed by actually pretending to help them search for the missing fruit.
"Deceitful behaviors such as theft are highly unusual for primates," Martin said. "But the fact that Bobo approached us that same night and tried to exchange the stolen bananas for more cocaine is what's truly astonishing."
"It's like he's a different Bobo now," he added.
Early in the study, Bobo's elevated mood and excessive chattering made him quite popular among the other chimpanzees. But researchers claimed that his increased irritability, short temper, and absenteeism at the jungle gym did not go unnoticed.
According to laboratory sources, when Martin and his team began injecting Bobo with highly concentrated solutions of cocaine, the chimp took to skipping meals altogether, often covering up for his lack of appetite by signing to friends that he had eaten a big lunch that day and wasn't hungry.
Last February, Bobo reportedly grew so self-deluded that he believed he had become the group's alpha male. In reality, however, his rank in the dominance hierarchy had reached a new low, especially after several cocaine-fueled episodes in which he threatened other males and then made forceful, awkward advances toward uninterested females.
"It was embarrassing," Martin said. "A lot of our researchers have been unable to look at Bobo the same way since."
Chimp sources confirmed that in recent weeks Bobo has stopped hanging out with friends in the control group, who only receive a placebo.
"Fight. Mad. Bobo. Please more juice drink," Pipa, a 6-year-old chimpanzee, told reporters by pressing symbols on a specially designed keyboard. "Pipa scared. Old Bobo. We want back."
Claiming they don't even know who the chimpanzee is anymore, researchers hypothesized that the constant ingestion of cocaine may have taken a physical toll on Bobo, who now staggers around on all fours, grunts nonsensically, and has been spotted trying to groom insects that aren't actually there.
Martin acknowledged that Bobo's cognitive abilities have also suffered, saying that the restless primate no longer shows any interest in finishing his assigned tasks and often does little more than flip off the researchers.
"We definitely didn't teach him to do that," Martin said. "That's totally the cocaine."
As of press time, Bobo was reportedly sprawled out on the floor of the laboratory, begging for more cocaine and offering to give researchers hand jobs in exchange for some.