Marin task force sees influx of party drug 'molly'

SGHteller

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Gary Klien
Posted: 01/24/2009 09:33:03 PM PST

A new party drug appears to be seeping into Marin, similar to ecstasy but more potent and less widely understood, county investigators said.

The street name is "molly," which some sources describe as a purer form of ecstasy, and others describe as different substances that mimic ecstasy. The name molly is said to mean "molecule" or "molecular" - as in a molecular variation of ecstasy.

Until about a year ago, the Marin County Major Crimes Task Force, the county's narcotics squad, had never encountered molly during its undercover operations. Since then, the unit has seized molly seven times and arrested six people suspected of selling it, according to sheriff's Sgt. Bruce Baker.

"The unique thing about this, we talked to other task forces, we talked about it at conventions. Other task forces aren't seeing it and aren't buying it like we are," Baker said.

Definitions of "molly" vary. In 2003, an announcement by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration defined the drug as TFMPP, or 1-(3-Trifluoromethylphenyl) piperazine, a powerful hallucinogen. Other sources describe the drug as a combination of TFMPP and a stimulant called BZP, or N-benzylpiperazine.

Still others describe it as pure, unalloyed MDMA - the chemical moniker for the substance known as ecstasy. MDMA causes euphoria and sensory distortions, but can also produce depression, anxiety, teeth-grinding, nausea and, in rare cases, organ failure and death, according to the National Institutes of Health.

"What they call 'ecstasy' is such a wide range of crap it could be anything," said one self-described former user, a 33-year-old task force informant who declined to be identified. "Molly should not have anything else in it - it should be just MDMA."

The informant, a musician, said he first used ecstasy while living in Southern California and attending all-night raves in the high desert. He said he did not encounter molly until he moved to Northern California.

"I would say it softens, uninhibits and makes you desire physical contact," he said. "It makes you want to be embraced. You just want to be embraced."

He described molly as a bitter powder that is gray or light tan, usually coming in gelatin capsules of 0.1 grams or 0.3 grams. Prices start around $15 per capsule, and the high lasts for hours, he said.

"You have to know the right people," he said.

In November, the DEA issued an "intelligence alert" that its Western Laboratory in San Francisco had received four sets of multilayered, multicolored candylike rave pills, all containing caffeine. Three of the sets tested positive for MDMA - ecstasy - while the fourth set were "ecstasy mimic tablets" that tested positive for TFMPP and BZP.

Special Agent Casey McEnry, spokeswoman for the DEA in San Francisco, said it is "not uncommon" for the lab to confirm a drug as TFMPP/BZP, but ecstasy is still much more prevalent. In the DEA's San Francisco field division, which runs from Bakersfield to Redding, the agency confirmed 1.5 million seized pills as ecstasy from 2006-08, McEnry said.

By comparison, 187,427 pills were confirmed as TFMPP/BZP over that time period, she said.

Molly can be manufactured from common over-the-counter medications, and its side effects can include hallucinations, rapid heart rate, dehydration and even heart failure, according to Marin task force Detective Mike Brovelli.

"It can be made anywhere: bathrooms, tubs, sinks," Brovelli said.

In one recent investigation, a molly-related arrest by the task force led to a much larger discovery.

The case involves a 26-year-old man who sold suspected molly to an undercover task force detective on three occasions between Nov. 14 and 26 in Marin, along with some psychedelic mushrooms, according to court documents. This led investigators to obtain a search warrant for the man's residence in Oakland, where they found 11 pounds of processed marijuana, about $3,000 in cash and two guns, along with a shotgun and a ballistic vest belonging to the man's roommate, said Baker, the task force sergeant.

The suspect, Jacob Vahit Ergil, has pleaded not guilty and is free on $50,000 bail. A trial date is pending, and his lawyer, David Pullman, declined to comment on the allegations.

Baker said the danger with molly is that young rave drug users, accustomed to ecstasy, move on to molly without appreciating the increased potency.

"That's where you get in a lot of trouble - these kids take ecstasy, and then they get molly and it's a lot stronger," he said.

Contact Gary Klien via e-mail at [email protected]
 
The caption accompanying this picture of some gorgeous drugs:

20090124__25molly1_300.jpg


...was not quoted, and I'd hate for it to be missed.

Marin County Sheriff's Office display some of the 100 tabs of 'molly' purchased from a suspected drug dealer during a recent undercover drug task force operation. 'Molly' is a powerful compound that looks like Ecstasy but has a slightly different molecular chemical structure that can elude Ecstasy tests.
 
hahahahahhahahaha

FAIL



"Molly can be manufactured from common over-the-counter medications, and its side effects can include hallucinations, rapid heart rate, dehydration and even heart failure, according to Marin task force Detective Mike Brovelli.

"It can be made anywhere: bathrooms, tubs, sinks," Brovelli said."





Awwwweeeesome lol great intelligence
 
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Its funny how everytime the media gets wind of a new form of an old drug or occasionlly even just slang that is new to them, they post a bunch of misinformation and propaganda and act as though it is new.
 
The name molly is said to mean "molecule" or "molecular" - as in a molecular variation of ecstasy.

Hahahaha. As opposed to what, the electromagnetic wave variation?
 
I just want to say- FUCK THAT SNITCH.

Fuckin dude from SoCal comes up North, gets popped, and starts snitching.:X
Just do your goddamn time!:X
 
That article seems to use the rule that if you throw enough mud [at drugs] then something has to stick somewhere... sigh...
 
Anyone with knowledge of chemistry knows that you cannot make MDMA in a bathtub. I mean, for shits sake, this has to be the worst article I've ever read. I would e-mail the writer, but there's so much misinformation in that article it would take me too long to explain everything correctly. Plus, its not my job to explain this stuff correctly, its the journalists responsibility because its what they get paid to do.

The journalism industry must have very low barriers to entry, because it seems to be populated by imbeciles.
 
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