Kids get drugs on Internet, says DEA

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Kids get drugs on Internet, says DEA
'Rogue pharmacies' contribute to abuse
By Bill Cotterell, Tallahassee Democrat
May 20, 2004

The head of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration said Wednesday that the Internet has become "the back-alley drug dealer" for young people looking for prescription pills.

The use of illegal drugs has declined significantly, in Florida and nationwide, DEA Administrator Karen Tandy told participants at the annual Florida Drug Summit in Tallahassee. But abuse of prescription drugs and production of methamphetamines remain dangerously high.

She blamed "a culture of indifference" among citizens who've never had a family member affected by addictive pills, narcotics or alcohol.

Because of more than 3,000 prescription-drug overdoses a year in Florida, Gov. Jeb Bush has championed the creation of a statewide database of all prescriptions given for potentially addicting drugs. The idea is to prevent addicts from filling multiple prescriptions and to prevent doctors and pharmacies from illegally over-prescribing.

But Tandy said hundreds of "rogue pharmacies" online tout "no waiting rooms, no physical exams and no prior prescriptions needed." That's how young people are finding it easy to get shipments of drugs illegally.

"The back-alley drug dealers ... are now in your homes, in your kid's bedroom and in your child's dorm room," she said. "Those kids, I don't need to tell you, are so adept on that Internet - I got my password from my 14-year-old - and those kids have access to an entire pharmacy. All they need is a credit card."

The DEA has determined that only 14 online pharmacies - including some nationally known companies such as CVS, Walgreens and Eckerd - fill prescriptions with proper clearance from doctors who have examined patients.

Governor praises drug courts

Some 300 health, education, law enforcement and social-service workers spent Wednesday sharing information about programs that have been successful in Florida. Columba Bush, the governor's wife, stayed for the sessions and actively discussed several of the reports.

The governor said he was pleased that Florida now has 88 drug courts, which allow those charged with relatively minor offenses to be sent to treatment instead of jail. Their daughter, Noelle, successfully completed such a program.

"I've seen it firsthand," Bush said. "I know the drug court system works."

He and his drug-policy adviser, Jim McDonough, lamented the third straight year of failure for a bill by Rep. Gayle Harrell that would create a statewide database of who's dispensing and who is consuming prescription drugs.

"The epidemic of overdoses of legal prescription drugs misused in our state is threatening," Bush said. "We should be scared by this."

Privacy concerns were the stumbling block for the database. Harrell said House Speaker Johnnie Byrd and a few other House members refused to let her bill pass this year. She said the measure had safeguards for privacy, making it a felony punishable by a $5,000 fine and five years in prison to hack into a patient's records.

Bush also expressed disappointment that the 2004 Legislature did not budget the full $16 million he requested for anti-tobacco advertising and education.

Street-drug use down

Nationwide, President Bush's goal of cutting drug use 10 percent in his first two years in office has been met or surpassed in many areas, Tandy said. Use of the club drug Ecstasy declined 54 percent, marijuana 11 percent, LSD 60 percent and amphetamines 17 percent.

"As much as the legalizers out there would like everyone to believe that we're losing the drug war, we have - not only here but across this country - met President Bush's first step drug-reduction goals," she said.

McDonough cited a survey of Florida high-school students last October that also documented declines in drug use. The survey of more than 8,000 teenagers was rigged with trick questions to detect deception.

Marijuana use was down by 10 percent. The survey revealed some increases in use of hallucinogenic mushrooms, the "date rape" drug GHB and depressants. "Alcohol remains the most resilient drug," McDonough said, with about 31 percent of students saying they had a drink in the preceding 30 days. But that was down 10 percent from 2001.

Link
 
I got my password from my 14-year-old - and those kids have access to an entire pharmacy. All they need is a credit card."

How many 14-year olds have credit cards ??? I don't know of any. And if they are using their parent's , obviously the parent can catch on pretty fast to mysterious pharmacy charges on their bills.

8)
 
Nationwide, President Bush's goal of cutting drug use 10 percent in his first two years in office has been met or surpassed in many areas, Tandy said. Use of the club drug Ecstasy declined 54 percent, marijuana 11 percent, LSD 60 percent and amphetamines 17 percent.


There so proud.... but then forget what they wrote the article about.
A drug epidemic.....Sure you seperate the drug catagories and you see a decline. but the overall "drug" use probably the same.


"The epidemic of overdoses of legal prescription drugs misused in our state is threatening," Bush said. "We should be scared by this"



What i get from reading this, is basically like......
Bush is taking credit for getting people to "trade off" on there drugs lol.
look...illegal % is down.... damn im good! "oh wait, for some reason prescription abuse is up....lets throw a few billion in investigations that way"



Do they link the concept.... that sometimes drug addicts commonly trade off for various reasons.
You can't be proud you got "johhny off LSD" then act suprized when you find out he is off doing oxy.

but, i could have read this completly wrong
 
Makes me wonder when they will be trying to censor, and regulate the internet. After all, they already tried taxing purchases, but that got shot down.
 
Related

Report: Easy to purchase unsafe drugs online

WASHINGTON - As Francine Haight and her two surviving children prepared to fly from Los Angeles to Washington on Tuesday, she shared the tragic story of her son, Ryan — a story she’ll tell a congressional subcommittee Thursday.

“He was a very special child," said Haight. "Unfortunately some of his friends talked him into buying drugs on the Internet."

Ryan Haight was 18 when he died of a drug overdose — a cocktail of painkillers, including the generic version of Vicodin that he obtained over the Internet. “It was like buying candy out of a grocery store,” Haight added.

A new report from the U.S. General Accounting Office shows just how easy it is. Undercover investigators purchased dozens of samples of unsafe drugs online.

The report is due to be released Thursday. NBC News obtained a copy in advance. In it, investigators conclude that highly addictive painkillers like Vicodin are easily obtained on the Internet, often without a prescription.

In addition, many of the drugs had no instructions, no warning labels and some were counterfeit.

“The Internet presents grave safety risks to American consumers,” said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn. “Consumer beware.”

Coleman, who requested the GAO investigation, says there are many legitimate prescription drug dealers on the Internet, but there are also hundreds of rogue Web sites and it’s often hard to tell the difference.

Coleman added, “That’s why we need the FDA to get in there and certify and to identify with that gold star on it, so you, as a consumer can understand this is a legitimate operation.”

Haight hopes her story will help convince Congress to give law enforcement the power it needs to weed out the bad operators and help others avoid her son’s fate.

“(He) really was going to make a difference in this world, I thought,” Haight said. “I just never knew he was going to be so far away when he did it.”

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5226578/
 
“The Internet presents grave safety risks to American consumers,”

8) Now that's probably most idiotic statement I've read in a while.

BAN THE INTERNET , USA !!!

:p
 
GAO: Narcotics Easy to Buy on Internet

By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Narcotics are easily purchased over the Internet from U.S. pharmacies with no prescription, congressional investigators maintained Thursday at a Senate hearing on the dangers of buying medications online.

Investigators said they purchased the painkiller hydrocodone from eight Web sites. "It seems that the key thing here is having your credit card," Robert Cramer, a senior investigator with the General Accounting Office (news - web sites), said.

In no instances were GAO employees who posed as patients asked to see a doctor or provide a prescription, Cramer said.

Despite safety concerns voiced by opponents of prescription drug imports, investigators said, however, they encountered few problems with medicines purchased from Canadian Web sites.

In some instances, Canadian online pharmacies had stricter standards than those in the United States, the GAO said in new report. Canadian pharmacies appeared to be more reputable than Internet pharmacies in other countries, it said.

Investigators who filled prescriptions on the Web in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Spain, Thailand and seven other countries were testifying Thursday to a Senate Governmental Affairs subcommittee. Prominent opponents of imported drugs also were to testify.

In contrast to orders filled in Canada, some of the drugs received from other foreign pharmacies were counterfeit and many came with no instructions or warnings, said the report by the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress. Others arrived in damaged or unconventional packaging.

A shipment of the narcotic OxyContin arrived in a plastic compact disc case, investigators said. A bottle of pills of the AIDS (news - web sites) drug Crixivan came inside a sealed aluminum can that was itself enclosed in a box labeled "Gold Dye and Stain Remover Wax."

All 18 Canadian sites required consumers to supply a physician-written prescription before filling orders. That was the case for five of 29 U.S. pharmacies; no other foreign pharmacies did.

Prescriptions filled in Canada and the United States came with labels from the dispensing pharmacy and generally included patient instructions and warnings, the report said.

The biggest problem investigators noted was that drugs shipped from Canada did not have FDA (news - web sites) approval for use in the United States for reasons such as production in unapproved plants or carrying different labels.

But the medicines had a comparable chemical composition to approved pharmaceuticals, the report said. "The samples from U.S. and Canadian pharmacies exhibited few problems otherwise," the report said.

Food and Drug Administration officials long have complained that it is misleading to say drug products are equivalent without subjecting them to extensive tests.

"Whether a foreign product contains the same active ingredient is no guarantee that it is identical to the FDA-approved product," the agency's acting commissioner, Lester Crawford, wrote in comments included with the report.

Tom Steward, a spokesman for Sen. Norm Coleman, the subcommittee chairman, said Canadian pharmacies came off well in the report.

"It gets down to strengthening Customs and FDA agents' ability to license and hold accountable these Internet Web sites wherever they are," Steward said.

Coleman, R-Minn., is among the lawmakers who recently abandoned opposition to importing drugs.

Lawmakers who advocate drug imports from Canada and elsewhere are trying to force a Senate vote to legalize the practice. The FDA has said it cannot guarantee the safety of the foreign products.

Older Americans have flocked to Canada for prescription medications as drug prices in the United States have soared and fixed incomes have not kept up, advocates say.

Several bills would strengthen federal regulation of Internet pharmacies and inspections of pharmaceutical manufacturing plants abroad.

Associated Press
L1nK
 
they did the same thing with crack cocaine....the same thing with grass 60 years ago....."they are coming after your children" this is by far teh most effective way to get support to fight drugs ...eventually (hopefully) t will backfire but tinl then it seems OP are just the next in the long history of govt. scare tactics....primarily"the evil pharmaciest are after your children" ..
 
sexualhealing said:
good article for the kids who didnt know where to find the pharmies...haha

haha just as i read this, the first thing that went through my head was "fuck me, where can i find these pharmacies" :p
 
Victim's mother pleads for online-drug clampdown

She tells Senate panel of son's deadly ordeal

By Joe Cantlupe
COPLEY NEWS SERVICE
June 18, 2004

WASHINGTON – The mother of La Mesa teenager Ryan Thomas Haight always figured her bright, athletic son would make a name for himself, be somebody.

Yesterday, Francine Hahn Haight was testifying on Capitol Hill for legislation that would forever carry his name – a bill aimed at clamping down on the kind of prescription drug purchases over the Internet that led to his death.

"We parents often worry about our children," Haight told the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which is examining pharmaceutical sales on the Internet. "We worry that they will try illegal street drugs, such as cocaine, LSD, heroin, and others," she said.

Haight, a nurse who now lives in Laguna Niguel, said she had plenty of concerns while raising three children. "We worry about porn and strangers they might meet on the Internet," she said, fighting back tears. "But never did I worry about buying prescription drugs on the Internet."

The 17-year-old was found dead in his parents' La Mesa home Feb.12, 2001. Authorities said he had mixed numerous pills, including the powerful narcotic hydrocodone, the generic for Vicodin and Lortab.

Francine Haight was among several witnesses who told the Senate panel about the growing problems of prescription drugs purchased over the Internet.

Investigators for the General Accounting Office said they easily purchased drugs from several U.S. Web sites where the only information they needed was a credit card.

A GAO report said Canadian pharmacies that worked on the Internet had stricter standards than U.S. pharmacies in verifying prescriptions. Some drugs obtained from pharmacy sites from other countries, including Mexico, came without patient warnings or arrived in damaged packages.

"The GAO investigation does reveal some encouraging news for those of us who use bona fide established domestic Internet pharmacies and those of us who support the safe importation of Canadian drugs," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., chairman of the investigations subcommittee.

Ryan Haight's name is on a bill sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and others in Congress that is aimed at thwarting problems posed by Internet shopping for drugs. The measure would:

Prohibit online pharmacies from distributing drugs to a consumer based solely on an online questionnaire.

Allow state prosecutors to pursue charges against online pharmacies suspected of wrongdoing even if they are based in another jurisdiction.

Require pharmacies to identify their business, pharmacist and doctor for consumers.

People with valid prescriptions from a doctor would still be able to buy medications.

Francine Haight has started ryanscause.org to fight prescription drug abuse, especially among the young. She said her son was an "incredible boy" – a top honors student who traveled the world and played varsity tennis for three years.

Ryan Haight began experimenting with prescription drugs following an exchange in an Internet chat room, his mother said. He made the purchases with money orders, she said.

"It was like buying candy in a grocery store," she said.

Link
 
i have a HRD time believing that overall drug use is down..i look around and dont see that as a fact whatsoever..shit, it seems EVERYONE i knows is either taking XANAX(scripted/non-scripted) or pain killas, X, or some COCAINE and WEED..
 
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