Dear A B,
My name is Duncan Dick and I am the Deputy Editor of Mixmag, responsible for commissioning the recent feature on Methoxetamine.
I am writing in response to your recent posts on Bluelight.ru and emails to Alex Miller / Dr Winstock etc. implying that the article may be some form of marketing on behalf of a website.
I would like to assure you that this is not the case. The use of the term 'roflcoptr' to refer to Methoxetamine came from the people the journalist talked to - that was how they refer to it, so that's how we referred to it. As you know, street names can vary hugely, even from person to person - one person's usual name for a substance can make someone else cringe.
That the spelling is the same as a website is entirely coincidental (unless of course that was where the users our journalist talked to bought it and that's why they call it that, which seems fair enough).
I should also add that our sub editors and I felt that the drug was named after the internet acronym rather than the gif / meme
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=roflcoptr - hence the dropping of the 'e'. This may be open to debate but was a style thing rather than anything sinister, I can assure you.
That our decision to drop the 'e' in the name may indirectly benefit a website or company is unfortunate, but certainly not our intention. In retrospect, I wish we had stuck with a more generic name - but as I say, the Roflcoptr name was the one that the group of users we interviewed used, so that was what we went with.
The name 'Cope Russell' means nothing to me - I've never met him/her, never worked with them and they have no connection to Mixmag that I am aware. The same goes for the company involved.
I would like to add that Mixmag has a history of commenting on drug trends amongst clubbers for nearly two decades and a reputation for integrity in this area that we have worked long and hard to build. I personally have been heavily involved with the Mixmag Drug Survey, conducted each year by Dr Adam Winstock and his team to the highest ethical and professional standards for three years.
I hope that this has set your mind at ease. I understand that drug use can be an emotive subject, but please, if you have any concerns about the reporting of drugs in Mixmag please feel free to contact me directly.
Please contact me if you have any further questions.
Yours Sincerely,
Duncan
Duncan JA Dick
Deputy Editor
Mixmag
[email protected]