Monday, 18 February 2008

"There are addicts who will spend the rest of their lives on the drug, and distributing it to them is a vital treatment," one specialist said.


"There are addicts who will spend the rest of their lives on the drug, and distributing it to them is a vital treatment," one specialist said. Tel Aviv has come up with a controversial new plan to give free heroin to addicts who have failed rehabilitation attempts, reports the Hebrew weekly Yediot Tel Aviv. City health and welfare officials are putting together the revolutionary plan, which is aimed at preventing the social damage caused by addicts trying to obtain money to buy the illicit drugs. According to the report, four out of every five heroin addicts who complete rehabilitation programs eventually end up back on the drug, and three out of every four property crimes are committed by drug addicts. The city's welfare service has decided to follow the example of some European countries and has come up with a plan to provide controlled quantities of heroin free to adult addicts who have failed several rehabilitation attempts. The distribution would be done at a specific medical clinic under the supervision of doctors. The plan will need to come before the Health Ministry for approval before it can go ahead.
The report said the city's welfare service is currently dealing with 1,707 households for drug-related problems, and workers in the field have long recognized that major problems arise from addicts' attempts to get money for drugs. Police statistics show that 75 percent of property crimes and many of the recent attacks on elderly people have been committed by addicts trying to get money. The figures also show that only 20% of addicts succeed in rehabilitation programs in the long term. The report said there are currently some 15,000 drug addicts in Israel, most of them addicted to heroin. No response was reported from the Health Ministry.

Jordan denied that she took cocaine during a drug binge


“I seriously thought, ‘Shall I end it now?’” Jordan revealed of her feelings. (ANI)Jordan denied that she took cocaine during a drug binge that left her feeling suicidal.Jordan, who is a 29-year-old mother of three, had taken the substance behind her husband Peter Andre’s back, but she has refused to reveal what it was she had used.On Feb 17 a spokeswoman for Jordan denied that it was cocaine that the model had used.“Katie did not take an illegal substance. It was a prescription drug,” the Sun quoted the spokeswoman as saying.“She did turn to drugs in the lowest ebb of her life. She knows it was a stupid thing to do,” the spokeswoman stated."Katie did not have to talk about this but has decided to do so as a warning. She wants to stop other people turning to drugs as a way of dealing with their problems,” the spokeswoman added.The model has confessed to the ordeal in her book ‘Jordan: Pushed To The Limit’, where she admitted that she had taken the drug in a bid to beat postnatal depression but feared she had overdosed.Jordan’s doctor had given her the all clear, but there was huge fight between her and 34-year-old Andre, making her run away from their home.

Friday, 15 February 2008

Stephen Crump Pickwicks and Bar Bed in Whitechapel dealing coke.

Stephen Crump, 41, who once earned £250,000 a year, was arrested by an undercover policewoman in a pub on the edge of the Square Mile. He was seized in a Met operation that uncovered a number of cocaine dealers selling drugs to City workers. Three dealers who sold between £20,000 and £30,000 worth of the drug a week to office workers in their lunch breaks have already been jailed.
Crump blamed the stress of his job after being caught plying the woman officer with cocaine on three separate occasions at the Mr Pickwicks bar. He was held in a 20-month investigation codenamed Operation Telon - the biggest of its kind ever carried out by Scotland Yard's Clubs and Vice Unit - which uncovered drug dealing at Mr Pickwicks and Bar Bed in Whitechapel. The former stockbroker was given a suspended sentence and ordered to do 250 hours of community service after his lawyer told the court he had turned to drugs to cope with his high-pressure career. Crump, who is now taking an IT course and trying to start up his own business, started work in the City at 17 and said he was offered cocaine almost immediately. At the peak of his addiction the father of two was spending £400 a day on cocaine and drinking two bottles of wine, 10 pints of lager and a bottle of vodka. He said: 'The pressures were immense and everyone was doing it. You would hear sniffing in the toilets. We would start work at 6.30am, take our first line at 11.30am, then be entertaining until 2am. I was very young and impressionable and suddenly I was earning all this money. 'I then became involved in a co-dependent relationship and would get home and carry on doing cocaine and drinking, then have a shower and go back to work. I was working in Singapore, Tokyo and Hong Kong, flying first class on holiday to Barbados and buying £2,000 Gucci suits. 'Now everything is gone. But I've been clean for 18 months and am pressing on, turning my life around and fighting to see my kids. I'm also engaged to a wonderful woman who has had a big part to play in my recovery.' In court his lawyer, John King, described how his client had only offered the cocaine to the officer in an attempt to woo her. This was about impressing a woman rather than commercial dealing,' he said. 'This sort of thing is rife in City traders and people working in the City as he was.' Venue: Bar Bed in WhitechapelHe added: '(Crump) had essentially been living in a dream world for 15 years, living with cocaine and therefore not taking care of his life or his family. Now he is, and he has changed dramatically.' Crump, of Basildon, Essex, admitted three counts of supplying a class-A drug and one of facilitating the supply of a class-A drug and was sentenced to a year in prison, suspended for two years. In November, Phillip James, 38, who lived in a Docklands apartment off The Highway, and Lee Ingram, 40, of Harwood Hall Lane, who had a £1.5m Upminster home, were each jailed for 10 years by Southwark crown court.They ran a highly lucrative cocaine and Viagra racket based at the Bar Bed in Leman Street. They spent their profits on holidays in Dubai and southern Spain and expensive jewellery. Anthony Best, 37, of Firbank Road, Romford, a crack addict who worked for the pair, was jailed for seven years. A spokesman for charity DrugScope said that many City workers turned to drugs. 'The problem is so bad that many City employers now have drug and alcohol policies and run random drug tests,' he said. 'Cocaine makes people more energetic and confident, which they might see as a benefit. When taken with alcohol it can also mean people are able to drink more.'

Thursday, 14 February 2008

Mel Gibson has attended Alcoholics Anonymous

Mel Gibson was today given the thumbs up by a judge to finally put his DUI shame behind him. was praised for meeting all the demands of his probation and told he will not have to come back to court.Judge Lawrence J. Mira saluted Gibson for sticking to the rules of his rehabilitation at the half-way stage and wished him good luck for the future. But the judge warned: “Now you’re on you’re your own.“This will be the most difficult time for you.”Gibson, smartly dressed in a suit, only spoke when the judge told him: “I believe you are committed to this rehabilitation.”
He replied: “Yes.”The actor, who infamously made ant-Semitic comments when he was arrested, stood alongside his attorney with his hands behind his back throughout the probation progress hearing in Malibu. He looked visibly relieved as he realised his DUI nightmare in the courts was finally over.Judge Mira, who had insisted Gibson appear in person, told him: “I am pleased with the efforts you have put in on this round of probation.
“This hasn’t been easy for you.”But the judge stressed Gibson is still only half-way through his probation. He said: “This probation has to run 36 months. There is no early termination.”The court heard how Gibson has attended Alcoholics Anonymous and court-ordered DUI meetings. Judge Mira said: “I don’t see in this particular case any need for future progress reports.”
He told Gibson he can continue to count on the support of the court and added: “Good luck to you.”The judge refused to let the hearing be recorded by reporters as he agreed it could encourage crazed fans who Gibson has been forced to take out a restraining order against.Oscar-winner Gibson pleaded no contest to the DUI charge in August 2006 and was given three years’ probation. He was also ordered to pay $1,400 in fines and attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, which he now does voluntarily.Gibson was driving his Lexus in Malibu when he was arrested in the early hours of the morning in July 2006. He issued a statement a day later apologizing for his “belligerent behaviour” when he was arrested. And he admtitted he had “battled the disease of alcoholism for all my adult life”.

Wednesday, 13 February 2008

Number of drug-related deaths in Scotland has increased by a quarter


The number of drug-related deaths in Scotland has increased by a quarter, according to new figures. The General Register Office for Scotland (Gros) said there were 421 drug-related deaths last year, 85 more than in 2005, representing a 25% rise. Heroin or morphine use was involved in 62% of the deaths, while methadone use accounted for 23% of the total. The statistics revealed that 83% of those who died were under the age of 45, with 16% under 25. Almost four-fifths - 79% - of the fatalities were men. Previously the highest ever number of drug deaths recorded in Scotland occurred in 2002 when 392 people died. According to Gros, 280 of the deaths were a direct result of drug abuse, 51 were caused by accidental poisoning and 40 by intentional self poisoning. Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill said a new strategy was needed to tackle the demand and supply of illicit drugs in Scotland. A 25% increase in fatalities in just one year is extremely concerning and presents a disturbing report card of Scotland's overall drugs problem
He said: "This tragic death toll highlights the true scale of the challenge we are facing - a 25% increase in fatalities in just one year is extremely concerning and presents a disturbing report card of Scotland's overall drugs problem. "Our new strategy must tackle demand as well as supply and we will place renewed focus on education, tough enforcement, and of course new emphasis on diversion and prevention by offering more young people opportunities in sports and the arts to build self-esteem." The Scottish Conservatives called the figures "deeply depressing and chilling".
'Zero-tolerance' Party leader, Annabel Goldie said: "We need a clearer strategy which rehabilitates those caught up in a life of drugs and helps them on the way to abstinence, whilst at the same time adopting a zero-tolerance attitude to drugs and especially towards drug dealers.
Labour's Hugh Henry also acknowledged that a radical rethink was required. He added: "If the issue is about more resources then Labour will back the executive if it wants to make more money available. "But I suspect this is about more than just money and what is really needed is a radical rethink by experts working in the field." The Liberal Democrats called the figures "very worrying indeed". "There also needs to be a renewed effort against drug dealers, large and small, to get them off our streets", said the party's health spokesman, Ross Finnie. 'Terrible menace' figures did show a reduction in the number of deaths associated with cocaine and diazepam use. In 2005, 44 people died after taking cocaine. That figure dropped to 33 last year.
Deaths from diazepam, which is associated with the abuse of other substances like heroin, peaked in 2002 but have since reduced. The drug claimed 78 lives last year.
The highest proportion of deaths occurred in the Greater Glasgow and Clyde NHS Board area, with 162 people dying through drug misuse, up 51 on the previous year.
In Grampian, 47 people died last year, up 24 on 2005's figures, while in Lothian the figure for drug-related deaths was 46.
These larger totals, however, include cases of accidental poisoning, deliberate self-poisoning, and cases where the victim's intention was unknown.
Graeme Pearson, director general of the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency and the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpos) spokesman on drugs, said the organisation was continuously looking for opportunities to reduce drug deaths.
He added: "The Scottish Executive policy of health, education and law enforcement is the best way to try and tackle the terrible menace of drugs that blights Scotland."

HEROIN use in rural parts of North Wales is on the increase and comparable to some of England’s larger cities.

A shocking report found Gwynedd and Anglesey had the highest rate of deaths per population in Wales last year, with eight out of 100,000 killed by drugs.It puts the region’s drug deaths on a par with Liverpool.Swansea had seven deaths per 100,000, and Ceredigion three. Powys had three in 2005 and one last year.The figures emerged in a report by the International Centre for Drug Policy at the University of London.North West Wales coroner Dewi Pritchard Jones said: “What’s shocking is the number of drug deaths coming in. At one time they were few and far between.”Mr Pritchard Jones, a member of the North Wales Drug Forum, said: “There have been drug-related deaths in Llandudno and Menai Bridge for years but what’s happening now is that there are more in places such as Denbigh, Holyhead, Bangor, Penygroes and Pwllheli. It has now spread to rural areas.”Mr Pritchard Jones said steps had been taken to ensure addicts took prescribed methadone in view of chemists in pharmacies, but in rural areas this was difficult to control.He said: “We are running a campaign that users must consume it within the pharmacy. That’s running well in towns like Colwyn Bay, Bangor and Holyhead but not in the countryside because it isn’t easy for people to get to a pharmacy twice a day.”Maldwyn Roberts, North Wales co-ordinator for community safety and substance misuse, and chairman of the Drug Related Death Review Group, said: “Usually heroin on its own does not kill but heroin is connected with most deaths.“Used with other drugs or alcohol it leaves users having trouble breathing or vomiting or drowning on the contents of their stomach.”Mr Roberts said many of the drug deaths were users who had decided not to get help from agencies and had taken drugs while on their own.The Cais drugs advisory service chief, Aneurin Owen, said: “The need for effective treatment is paramount if we are to reduce drug related deaths. Treatment has to be comprehensive, including more in-patient de-tox and better follow-up links in the community.”Carol Moore, chief officer of North Wales Probation Service said:“We have six substance misuse action teams at local authority level bringing together the police, probation, health and organisations involved in front-line substance misuse.“In addition we have the drug intervention programme funded by the Welsh Assembly Government and which delivers a range of services to people who have committed offences connected with drug misuse and at-risk groups.“Within the Probation Service we are able to offer a drug rehabilitation requirement as part of a community sentence for anybody who is going through the courts where drugs or substance misuse is a problem linked to their offending.”Caernarfon Plaid Cymru MP Hywel Williams said: “It is a particular problem in rural areas because people are isolated.”Figures for North East Wales and central North Wales were not supplied.
A recent study carried out by a group of experts from North Wales and London concluded that “the prevalence of may be rising.”Out of a population of around 250,000, researchers found an approximate total of 820 heroin users aged between 15-44 living in North west Wales, almost 1.2% of the population.However they estimated that the total number of users in the area to be much higher at aroheroin use in North west Walesund 1,300.One expert said the heroin problem in rural North west Wales was the same as Brighton.The study said: “The prevalence of heroin use in North West Wales is comparable to that reported from urban areas of the UK.”The study pointed to “pockets of high social deprivation and an established heroin-using population.”The experts analysed police custody figures, opiate-related overdose figures and hospital admissions. They also took data from hepatitis C tests.Out of 322 observed heroin users 72% were male, and 60% aged under 30.

Substance abuse amongst children and teenagers

A significant proportion of parents are currently unaware of the prevalence of substance abuse amongst children and teenagers. Based upon the statistics, prevention is clearly the key here, but often parents delay the discussion of drug abuse issues with their children, unfortunately assuming that they won’t be exposed to drugs until they are older. As the statistics below demonstrate, drug abuse can often occur very early on in today’s drug abuse and binge drinking culture. So please don’t make the common mistake of putting off your discussion about drug and alcohol awareness with your children. 9% of 13 year olds and over a quarter (27%) of 15 year olds reported that they had used an illicit drug at some point in their lives. 7% of 13 year olds and 23% of 15 year olds reported that they had used an illicit drug in the year prior to the survey.4% of 13 year olds and 14% of 15 year olds reported that they had abused an illegal drug in the month prior to the survey which is perhaps indicative of more frequent recreational drug use.
There was only minor difference between boys and girls in the statistics of those who reported that they had used illegal drugs in the last month (13 year olds, boys 4%, girls 3%: 15 year olds, boys 14%, girls 12%). 4% of 15 year olds admitted abusing illegal drugs at least once per week (including those reporting use on most days). An additional 4% of 15 year olds reported that they often abused illegal drugs once or twice per month and 4% a few times a year.

Third of deaths on UK roads

Just over a third of deaths on UK roads are now young people aged 25 or under, so this is without doubt a serious problem. This equates to the death or serious injury of a young motorist or passenger every hour on average across the United Kingdom.

Detailed survey of over 8000 young motorists

A detailed survey of over 8000 young motorists (aged from 17 to 24) carried out by Auto Trader, which is a UK motoring magazine and website, showed a frightening trend towards driving under the influence of either drugs, drink or both.In today's drug abuse and binge drinking culture amongst young adults and teenagers it is unfortunately no surprise that the statistics are high. In fact, as many as 17% of the young motorists surveyed admitted regular use of Cannabis, more alarmingly 12% frequently use the dangerous and addictive class A drug Cocaine, and 10% revealed regular use of Ecstasy. However, the greater danger comes from upwards of 10% admitting that they regularly drove their cars whilst under the influence of drink or drugs.When questioned about driving under the influence of substances, over 40% felt fine to drive their vehicles after using illegal drugs and 31% found it acceptable to drive after consuming alcohol. A high proportion were unaware of the actual legal limits for alcohol consumption when driving and as a result 8% had already been involved in an accident while under the influence, with a further 11% admitting a near miss.

alcohol related deaths in Suffolk has soared by nearly 50 per cent in the space of just four years

new figures show the number of alcohol related deaths in Suffolk has soared by nearly 50 per cent in the space of just four years.The figures, from the Office for National Statistics, show that in 2002 there were 48 alcohol related deaths in Suffolk - but this increased by 45.8pc to 70 in 2006.The increase is more than twice the regional average.Deaths across the East of England increased by 21.9pc in the same period from 456 alcohol related deaths in 2002 to 556 in 2006.The statistics came to light following a parliamentary question from Richard Spring MP.Mr Spring, Conservative MP for West Suffolk, has called on government to take action to stem the problem.He said: “The tragic cost of excessive drinking is putting a huge burden on our NHS.“It is causing massive additional pressure on our local hospitals and emergency services.“The government needs to stop thinking in the short term, make public health a priority and produce some serious solutions to tackle this growing problem.”The new data coincides with figures published last month showing 157 people were admitted to Ipswich Hospital for alcoholic liver disease in 2005/06 compared with 102 in 2001/02 - a rise of 53.9pc.

Meanwhile 98 people were admitted for cirrhosis of the liver in 2005/06 compared with 63 in 2001/02 - a rise of 55.6pc.

we found kids as young as 14 who were knocking back adult-sized quantities of booze - and boasting of doing it every week

Are our youngsters really spending their pocket money on super-strength cider and hard spirits? The government certainly thinks so.Home Secretary Jacqui Smith plans to crack down on the nation's underage drinkers. Police will get the power to seize alcohol from under-18s, and Smith is also considering bringing in fines and parental contracts.But is this an over-reaction? Are things really that bad? To find out, Mirror investigators talked to youngsters in nine typical towns across the UK at 9pm on Friday night.We met them on the streets, in parks, playgrounds and even outside an under-18s alcohol-free disco - and quizzed them about their drinking habits.Horrified, we found kids as young as 14 who were knocking back adult-sized quantities of booze - and boasting of doing it every week.Many admitted to us that they'd ended up brawling and having under-age sex after getting tanked up on cheap supermarket booze.Frank Soodeen of the charity Alcohol Concern says: "Your investigation shows that more children than ever are getting access to alcohol and many of them are turning into hardened drinkers at a very young age."There's a clear link between early alcohol use and hard drug use, crime, poor performance in school and unwanted teen pregnancies... It's a bit much for adults to say how terrible underage drinking is when we haven't

Drugs and alcohol remain key drivers of crime and are of significant public concern.

Binge-drinking and alcohol-related violence will affect Britain's streets for years to come, an internal Government review warns.The Cabinet Office strategy document paints a depressing picture of a nation which will face "persisting" problems with yob crime - as well as huge pressures caused by immigration.It will be seized on by critics as proof that, despite ten years of initiatives, the Government has failed to get a grip on anti-social behaviour or migration.The 180-page study - entitled Realising Britain's Potential: Future Strategic Challenges for Britain - says: "Drugs and alcohol remain key drivers of crime and are of significant public concern."Social trends mean the challenges of drugs and alcohol are likely to remain, with the consumption of Class A drugs and binge-drinking persisting.""Particular future challenges surround high-visibility offending (such as underage binge-drinking in public and anti-social behaviour) and high harm/profile offending (such as gang-related violence)."The review, slipped out on Friday after MPs left for the half-term recess, also warns that gun crime has yet to be brought under control.The strategy document - which has a foreword by Gordon Brown - says: "Particular attention needs to be paid to certain offences such as some forms of violent crime (e.g. gun and knife crime) that have remained persistent. There are particular challenges in relation to gun crime."It also warns that only one in five people believe Government claims that crime is falling. Fewer than half - 43 per cent - believe police numbers have been increased.Confidence in the criminal justice system is also falling, the document says, as well as faith in the prison service and the police.Cabinet Office officials, who have prepared the strategy for use across Whitehall, concede the huge influx of migrants to Britain will continue.It follows predictions by the Office of National Statistics that migration will increase the population by up to 190,000 a year.The paper says: "Net migration to the UK is projected to continue. High levels of immigration may increase demand on some public services."For example, in some areas migration has added to school rolls and required schools to make extra provision for English as a second language."It warns of migrants settling in "clusters", which could lead to a negative reaction from locals.The quiet release of the document was spotted by Tory Shadow Home Secretary David Davis, who published his own alarming study on Britain's teenage binge- drinking culture.Last week, Home Secretary Jacqui Smith threatened once again to come down hard on under-18s caught drinking alcohol.But the Tories said that, based on past enforcement action, youngsters had less than a one in 250,000 chance of being punished.According to a survey conducted by members of the British Beer and Pub Association, more than a million people a month are being turned away from pubs for being under-age or not having the right proof of age.The figures for shops and supermarkets, based on returns from one national offlicence chain, suggest a further million attempts a month to buy alcohol, the Tories say.But in 2006 only ten people between ten and 17 were taken to magistrates' courts for buying alcohol illegally.A further 13 were cautioned, and 62 received on-the-spot fines. The Tories said this means the chance of receiving any form of sanction for trying to buy alcohol under-age is just one in 282,000.Mr Davis said: "Under-age drinking damages young people and fuels youth crime. Ministers talk endlessly about cracking down on alcohol-related violence, but these figures show the Government's staggering complacency when it comes to taking the action required.
"The Government's basic failure to enforce the law sends totally the wrong message about under-age drinking and puts the public at risk from the spiralling violence it generates."
A police chief is urging the Government to ban cheap alcohol to help curb binge-drinking.Northumbria Chief Constable Mike Craik wants to see an end to special promotions by pubs, such as two or three shots of spirits for the price of one.Mr Craik also called for alcopops to be taken off the shelves and tougher controls imposed on alcohol advertising.He says legislation is needed - "the Government should take the bull by the horns on this issue".

Saturday, 9 February 2008

Brad Renfro,died January 15 from an accidental overdose of heroin


Actor Brad Renfro,died January 15 from an accidental overdose of heroin, the Los Angeles County coroner's office said today.
The actor had been found dead at his home with injection marks on his hands, and the cause of death was "acute heroin/morphine intoxication" via injected drugs.
Renfro was on probation at the time, dating to a December 22, 2005 arrest during a police sting (during which 14 people bought fake balloons of heroin from undercover officers) in the city's skid row.
At an August court hearing he told a judge he was trying to stay clean; Coroner's office spokesman Craig Harvey told the Los Angles Times
Harvey said Renfro's friends told coroner's officials that the 25-year old actor had been clean in the weeks leading up to his fatal overdose. If true, Harvey said it was possible that Renfro had injected a dose of heroin typical for his days of heavier drug use

Thursday, 7 February 2008

Drug dealers are preying on patients in mental health units

Drug dealers are preying on patients in mental health units by pretending that they are friends and selling them cannabis, a government health chief revealed last night.
Louis Appleby, national director for mental health at the Department of Health, told The Times it was “well known” that dealers found their way into mental health units and exploited patients who were seriously ill. Some hospitals have brought in sniffer dog patrols to scare dealers off but staff say that they have no rights to stop patients and friends coming in or out, or to search anyone who may be carrying drugs.
Professor Appleby’s comments came as it was revealed that the potent “skunk” form of the drug now accounts for up to 80 per cent of cannabis sold on the street — up from 15 per cent six years ago. The latest figures were revealed yesterday at a meeting of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, a government body that is considering whether cannabis should be returned to Class B status with tougher penalties for those caught in possession.
The Government has indicated its support for reclassification, as revealed by The Times last month, amid growing concerns about the health effects of cannabis. It has been linked to an increased risk of psychotic illness and other associated mental health problems.

Sunday, 3 February 2008

Ecstasy mixed with methamphetamine.

The clover leaf is more than a good luck symbol for some these days.
That image, along with others like kittens and the Adidas logo, have been misappropriated by illicit drug manufacturers in Canada. The colored branding images are used to popularize a new drug being exported into the United States: Ecstasy mixed with methamphetamine.
The powders of the two drugs are pressed into pill form and smuggled across the U.S. border, according to law enforcement officials. Approximately 2 million tablets a week are manufactured in Canada, federal authorities say.
Vermont State Police say they are seeing the drug crop up in pockets around the state.
"It's started now, so it doesn't look like it's leaving," said Vermont State Police Lieutenant Leo Bachand, the commander of the Northern Drug Task Force.
Bachand said his team has made two controlled "hand-to-hand" buys of the drug from a man in St. Johnsbury. The orange pills, about the size of aspirin, came from Massachusetts, but Bachand said his team has arrested several people at the Canadian border attempting to cross with quantities of the drug that were manufactured in Canada.
According to Ted Woo, chief public affairs officer for the New England area for U.S. Customs and Border protection, there have been no major seizures of the drug in New England border states.
But local officials said they are starting to see it arrive in Vermont.
"We've made other arrests of small amounts that (were) manufactured up there in Canada," Bachand said. "Those pill presses put out in huge amounts."

Investigators said they purchased 10 pills one time and four pills another time from 27-year-old Christopher Laberge, of St. Johnsbury, who reportedly obtained the drugs from Massachusetts. Investigators paid $20 a pill for the Ecstasy mixed with methamphetamine.

Laberge will face charges of possession and sale of a controlled substance and aiding in the commission of a felony in Vermont District Court in St. Johnsbury on March 24.

Saturday, 2 February 2008

Inverclyde men are four times more likely to die of drink than the average UK male.

Inverclyde men are four times more likely to die of drink than the average UK male.Government figures show the area now ranks second in the country for male alcohol-related death. Only Glasgow has a worse record and the latest figures from the Office of National Statistics show the problem is continuing to rise.
Greenock and Inverclyde MSP Duncan McNeil said the area is reaping the grim consequences of generations of alcohol addiction.
He said: “There’s no quick fix. What we’re dealing with is 20 years of alcohol addiction.
“The consequences of our unhealthy relationship with drink are with us — violence on our streets, underage drinking and binge-drinking. It’s still going on and we have to face up to it.”
But he added that there is hope for the future: “We’ve seen that with smoking going down that part of that battle was government action, but it was also that smoking became less socially acceptable.
“Once people come to the opinion that is’s unacceptable to drink and shout and bawl and fight in the street, that is part of the process of solving the problem.”
Pub landlord and Inverclyde health campaigner Ciano Rebecchi says cheap booze and a culture of drinking in Inverclyde is to blame for the current situation.
But he says the Government also needs to do more to help Inverclyde escape its drink death sentence.
Councillor Rebecchi said: “Government keeps telling us what they’re doing about it but what have they done?
“They talk about putting the price of drink up but people still buy it.
“We have got to change the culture here as well, and we got to educate as well.
“The first thing we’ve got to do is make drink is not being sold cheaply.
“We’re in a situation where here in Inverclyde you can by a can of strong drink cheaper than bottled water. That has got to change.”
Inverclyde Council’s alcohol service say action is already being taken to tackle booze addiction.
A spokesperson said: “Through Social Work, we have a dedicated alcohol team that works tirelessly in the community to offer support to those who need it. Since last year they have achieved two COSLA awards for their efforts and held a successful community event in November to raise awareness about addiction.
“We obviously want a healthier Inverclyde and hope more local people realise that help and support for alcohol related problems is available.
Through Inverclyde Alcohol and Drug Forum we will continue to work with partners on this key issue and we would urge those who need support to contact our alcohol service on 715812/3.”
Women in Inverclyde fare slightly better in the booze league of shame. Whilst the area has the second highest level of drink related death in men, the area is the fourth worst for female related death.

Westminster, Islington and Camden Drug Courts

Three London councils - Westminster, Islington and Camden - have combined to set up the initiative, which will sit at the Inner London Family Proceedings Court.
The three-year pilot will cost more than £1.3m, with just under £900,000 coming from central government and the rest from the three boroughs.
The focus will very much be on therapy and recovery and so therefore on the longer-term interest of the child
Currently two-thirds of children taken into care in inner London have parents with drug or alcohol problems.
Justice minister Bridget Prentice said: "Cases will be brought to court earlier wherever a parent is suspected of substance or alcohol abuse.
"And during the course of the case, the focus will very much be on therapy and recovery and so therefore on the longer-term interest of the child."
She added: "If we can take a step towards ending the misery drugs and alcohol abuse causes families, that can only be a good thing."
The concept of the court is American and relies on swift and co-ordinated action from drug experts, social workers and housing professionals.
The judge could order parents to attend one-to-one counselling or group sessions to avoid having their kids taken into care.
Specialist district judge Nick Crichton, who has campaigned for such a court for the past five years, said: "We are confident that the pilot court will be able to make a significant difference to the lives of the children whose cases will come before us, and we are excited that at last the project is about to start."
He said the court would not focus solely on detoxifying the parent, but seek at the same time to understand the other problems that could be contributing to their situation.
These could include abusive relationships, debt, mental health problems, learning difficulties, and housing issues.
The court could recommend visits to the housing department, Alcoholics Anonymous sessions, and even advise ending abusive relationships.
"To some extent we might have to be uncomfortably directive," Judge Crichton said.
Parents' progress will be monitored by the same judge every two to four weeks - a point emphasised by Judge Crichton as key to the pilot's success.
In the US, the courts have a high success rate of keeping children with their parents after they have received help.
Westminster councillor Sarah Richardson said: "This new court process will give us the chance to intervene and support the family unit rather than take it apart, by helping parents through treatments and recovery.
"This, we hope, will keep both the child safe and the family together."
The project will be evaluated by experts from Brunel University to see if parents on its programme are more successful in tackling their substance abuse.
It will also monitor whether children of addict parents can safely remain at home, or if the scheme helps youngsters in care be returned to their parents.
Judith Harwin, professor of social work at Brunel University, said there were two problems with the existing policy of dealing with addictive parents.
In cases of illegal drug use, such as crack or heroin, authorities had "far too speedy a response" to remove the child before "parents have a chance to show whether they can address their problems".
In other cases, such as alcohol abuse, the case comes to court "far too late". The child can already be suffering from neglect and is more difficult to place with an alternative family.
"This means the child may drift in care for a long time", which could have poor outcomes for their future education, health and employment prospects, Professor Harwin said.

UK's first family drug and alcohol court

The UK's first family drug and alcohol court is due to open in London today.
The court, based on a US model, will hear childcare cases where one or both parents suffer from an addiction to alcohol or narcotics.
The new venture will hear family cases - such as child care applications - from three London councils - Westminster, Islington and Camden. A specialist judge will work with addiction specialists and social workers at the Family Drug and Alcohol Court, fast-tracking addicted parents into treatment and recovery programmes.
The three-year pilot, set up as a joint initiative by the three councils, will cost more than £1.3m, with just under £900,000 coming from central government and the rest from the three boroughs.
Currently, two-thirds of children taken into care in inner London have parents with drug or alcohol problems.
Justice minister Bridget Prentice said: "Cases will be brought to court earlier wherever a parent is suspected of substance or alcohol abuse.
"And during the course of the case, the focus will very much be on therapy and recovery and so therefore on the longer-term interest of the child."
She added: "If we can take a step towards ending the misery drugs and alcohol abuse causes families, that can only be a good thing."
The judge will be able to order parents to attend one-to-one counselling or group sessions to avoid having children taken into care.
The court may also recommend that a parent ends an abusive relationship or can advise them to visit a housing department or attend AA meetings.
Specialist district judge Nick Crichton, who has campaigned for such a court for the past five years, said: "We are confident that the pilot court will be able to make a significant difference to the lives of the children whose cases will come before us, and we are excited that at last the project is about to start."
Parents' progress will be monitored by the same judge every two to four weeks - a point emphasised by Judge Crichton as key to the pilot's success.
The project will be evaluated by experts from Brunel University

stops the drug from reaching the brain and producing a sought-after high

In a search for what could be the ultimate cure for drug addiction, scientists have developed a vaccine which prevents the body from getting high.
The hope is that it can stop people from falling back into a spiral of addiction if they have a relapse.
The most promising results so far have been with cocaine, but researchers hope it could also one day be used to cure addiction to methamphetamine, heroin and even cigarettes.
"The vaccine slowly decreases the amount of cocaine that reaches the brain," said Thomas Kosten, a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who has been working on the vaccine since 1995.
"It's a slow process, and patients do not go through any significant withdrawal symptoms."
The vaccine works by getting the body's immune system to recognize the drug as foreign and attack it in the blood stream.
It does so by injecting an altered version of the drug into the body which has been attached to a protein that the body will recognize as a threat.
"The body then says, 'This is a foreign article. I should start making antibodies to it,'" Kosten said in a telephone interview.
The cocaine molecules eventually pass through the kidneys and are excreted through the urine.
That stops the drug from reaching the brain and producing a sought-after high.
Use of the vaccine would lead to a gradual tapering of dependence, Kosten said.
"Gradually, antibody levels would rise. If you kept using (cocaine), you'd get less and less of an effect."
Of all the drugs tested, cocaine is the easiest one for which to develop a vaccine because of an enzyme in the bloodstream, cholinesterase, that helps break it down, Kosten said.
He has also begun to test vaccines for methamphetamine and heroin in animal studies, and hopes to eventually add nicotine to the list.
"That's going to be the moneymaker," he said.
The injections are designed for therapeutic -- not for preventative -- use, and are meant for those already suffering from addiction.
That, however, does not rule out other possible future uses, Kosten said.
"You could potentially inject pregnant cocaine users with the vaccine to prevent their fetuses from becoming contaminated," he explained.
Other uses could include administering the vaccine to high-risk adolescents in order to prevent them from becoming addicted early on, he said, while acknowledging that this would raise serious ethical and legal questions.
Testing for the cocaine vaccine has included a series of five injections over a period of three months, Kosten said.
The vaccine has one more large scale human study scheduled before it is ready for the federal Food and Drug Administration approval process.
A similar nicotine vaccine is also in the early stages of testing by several groups of European researchers. Kosten hopes to have the vaccine on the market in two to three years.

Drug Court model for United Kingdom

Instead of sentences, Mercer County Circuit Court Judge William Sadler handed down diplomas and new leases on life Monday.
The judge and a crowded courtroom of supporters gathered to wish seven graduates of the Southern Regional Drug Court well on their way into new, drug-free journeys, and two of the special speakers know what it’s like to travel the same roads.
Melissa Tedder was one of the first to complete the Mercer County program designed to provide alternative sentencing designed to help drug offenders overcome addiction and escape time behind bars. At the time she entered the program, Tedder didn’t have much to smile about and even fewer opportunities in her outlook.
“I was a menace to society. My life had fallen apart as a result of my drug addiction,” she said Monday.
This week, she couldn’t stop the smile from spreading across her face as she told the audience how her life had turned around since she entered the program and graduated in June 2007. In fact, she’s getting married soon. She’s held a job for 18 months straight, and she’s worked hard to repair relationships with her children and her mother.
Though she did the recovery work herself, she said it never would have been possible without the court’s strict supervision and the support of the drug court treatment team.
“I’ll always be grateful for this program,” she said.
Kenneth Shrader, another graduate, said he carries many titles. He’s a father, a husband, an employee and more. A couple of years ago, there were some other names he called himself.
“I was hopeless. I was an addict,” he said.
Shrader said his family and everyone who cared about him had given up, but there was one chance left. He was referred and accepted to the drug court docket, and today, he’s sober and once more surrounded by a family who knows he is strong enough to beat addiction.
Holding his new baby and watching his daughter in the audience, he said those relationships showcase the biggest differences in his life.
“Today, I remember a 4-year-old who didn’t want to leave her mommy’s leg, and now comes running to her daddy at the door,” he said.
Magistrate Mike Flanigan, who oversees the misdemeanor segment of the Southern Regional Drug Court along with Magistrate Rick Fowler, hosted Monday’s ceremony and reminded the seven graduates that the celebration was not a conclusion.
“It’s not the end, only the beginning,” he said.
Though Sadler said he was a skeptic when Circuit Court Judge Derek Swope approached him about a drug court, he said he became a believer as a team of community corrections officials began touring similar courts and making plans for their own in late 2004 and early 2005.
“We saw what drug court was truly about ... It was truly about helping people with addiction problems,” he said, along with relieving the court system of non-violent drug offenders and the expenses associated with incarcerating non-violent offenders.
It costs approximately $25,000 a year to incarcerate someone, and Mercer County has struggled to tame its bills to the Southern Regional Jail in Beaver. Participants in Monday’s graduation said the drug court not only saves money in jail fees; they said it spends treatment dollars more wisely.
In addition, drug court participants are expected to submit to drug testing, complete treatment goals, hold down jobs and give back to the communities in which they were once burdens.
Drug Court Coordinator Laura Helton said the 78 participants accepted so far have completed more than 15,000 hours of community services, performing tasks that would have cost the county an estimated $92,000 if community corrections clients had not performed them.
West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals Justice Brent Benjamin, has attended all three of the local drug court graduation and said he was proud to see seven graduates Monday, a sure sign the program is picking up momentum. While speed of completion and statistics were to be commended, he said they were not the most important things to recognize during the graduation ceremony.
“The lives changed are what matter,” he said.
To the grads, he said, “Get out there, and start the rest of your lives.”
The keynote speaker for the day, West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals Chief Justice Elliott “Spike” Maynard, changed his address after hearing the previous graduates speak.
“I don’t know anything I could say that would be as powerful as what Melissa Tedder and Kenneth Shrader had to say,” he said.
There are five drug courts in operation in West Virginia — three for adults and two for juveniles. Maynard said their successes prove to judges and observers alike that putting people behind bars isn’t always the answer.
“This works. This saves lives and saves families,” he said.
Though he said words would never be enough to express his pride in the treatment team and graduates, he said he still had two special ones to deliver: “Thank you.”
“Thank you for making changes in your lives,” he said. “God bless you, and thank you for being such a success and for making the program such a success.”
As the seven new graduates were called to accept their diplomas, Flanigan and Sadler touted their accomplishments in the program and tallied their drug-free days, and all announcements were met with broad smiles and a room full of applause.
At the conclusion, Flanigan announced, “To our graduates, congratulations. To our participants, you’re next.”

Scotland needs an army of 750 new drugs workers

Scotland needs an army of 750 new drugs workers if the escalating problem of substance misuse is to be tackled effectively, according to the Scottish Drugs Forum (SDF), which submitted recommendations to the government last week in the hope they will influence its forthcoming Drugs Strategy for Scotland.
SDF director Dave Liddell said it was time to stop treating drug addiction as a medical problem and more as a social problem. He said the 750 workers proposed by the SDF would be broken down into 200 housing support posts, 200 workers to help drug users find work, 250 family support officers and 100 outreach workers.
Liddell said: "It's about wraparound treatment that goes beyond the medical focus, and those 750 posts recognise that people with drug problems, in most cases, have a range of social problems, and if they are not addressed then the chances of them addressing their drug problem is pretty remote."
He insisted that extra investment for drugs resources should come out of the regeneration budget, which is about £1.6 billion over the next three years.
Liddell said it was clear existing regeneration programmes "don't take full account of the social problems that exist in that community" and instead concentrate on the "bricks and mortar".
"It's not enough to fix housing stock on its own; it's about regenerating the entire community," he said.
"We should look at the models we use for development in third world countries where you start to prepare those communities to become more resilient, and that obviously involves education, training and employment in the local area."
Joy Barlow, head of Scottish Training on Drug and Alcohol (Strada) said it was time for everyone entering social care professions to have basic training in drug and alcohol misuse.
"Very few professionals have drug and alcohol misuse training as part of their pre-qualification or undergraduate diploma. For example, very few school teachers ever really had the opportunity to explore these issues. It is fundamental that teachers are able to identify and intervene with those children who are experiencing drug and alcohol misuse or are living with someone who is.
"The Curriculum for Excellence is going to find it hard to meet its four national characteristics, which include things such as confident learners, if quite a few of them are disadvantaged by life's circumstances, and drug and alcohol misuse can be a disabling life experience for them," she said.
"Drug and alcohol misuse probably impacts every level of professional discipline across Scotland today, and in education and training we are not hitting the spot."
Andrew Horne, director of Addaction Scotland, a drug and alcohol treatment charity, said more staff were needed to address the log jam of drug addicts who were seeking services.
"I met a guy in our service who couldn't even get on a waiting list because he was seen as not priority, and he then doesn't show up on statistics. If you can't get into treatment you can't get into rehabilitation.
"He is left out there and that happens quite a lot. You have a motivated person who can't even stabilise or detox, he can't even get his foot in the door.
"Then there are those who want to get out, but there aren't enough employability workers in the field who can help with training and education."
A Scottish government spokesman said: "We welcome the Scottish Drugs Forum's recommendations and will give them careful consideration as we develop our new drugs strategy."

Malta's first National Drugs Policy

Malta's first National Drugs Policy was launched which will be coordinated by a newly set up National Coordinating Unit for Drugs and Alcohol within the Ministry of Social Solidarity.
€69,000 (Lm30,000) have been allocated to Caritas for the organisation’s drug harm reduction shelter. Other entities running drug rehabilitation programmes will also benefit from financial aids, so that those who opt to follow residential care instead of a prison sentence could receive a weekly allowance.
Minister Dolores Cristina announced that the Housing Authority will be renting out two apartments for youths who finished residential programmes and need help integrating in society.
She also said the policy provides the necessary tools to battle the drug problem better in Malta. The policy streamlines the practices to be adopted by various entities involved in providing drug-related services and aims to improve the quality and increase the provision of services as well as provide a more coordinated mechanism to reduce the supply and demand of drugs.

overdose kits

overdose kits given to heroin addicts have saved eight lives, leading to calls for them to be provided for thousands of addicts in Scotland.
About 300 of the kits – syringes loaded with the drug naloxone – have been given to addicts' friends and families under two Scottish pilot schemes. Similar action has sharply cut deaths in Berlin, San Francisco and Chicago.
The pilot schemes, in Glasgow and South Lanarkshire, involve take-home doses of naloxone, a liquid that is injected and blocks the effects of opiates. It will keep a heroin user who is slipping into a potentially fatal coma alive for up to 20 minutes.
Under the pilots, which have been running since last April, with the cost of around £40,000 funded by local NHS boards, family members and friends of drug users are given training on how to detect the early signs of an overdose and on basic resuscitation techniques.
There have been six successful uses of the drug in Glasgow and a further two in South Lanarkshire.
But one of Scotland's leading drug experts has voiced grave fears that the drug will only encourage even more reckless drug abuse among Scotland's estimated 50,000 heroin addicts.
Neil McKeganey, professor of drug misuse research at Glasgow University, also believes giving drug users' families needles to take home will put children in danger and says the pilots are not being properly evaluated.
With the number of drug deaths hitting a record high of 421 in 2006 and a similar figure expected for 2007, experts say naloxone kits should be given to thousands of addicts' relatives and friends around the country.
Dr Jane Jay, chairwoman of the National Drug Death Forum, said: "This drug has, in a number of cases, made the difference between life and death. The cost is relatively low, but I would also ask 'what price a life'?"
She is now urging Kenny MacAskill, the justice secretary, to approve a national roll-out of naloxone among all heroin addicts in Scotland.

zolpidem,Stilnoct

sleeping drug which actor Heath Ledger had admitted taking has been linked to six deaths in the UK.
Figures obtained by the Sunday Herald have revealed that six fatal suspected adverse drug reactions to zolpidem have been reported to Britain's medicines watchdog since 2001.
Almost 200 further incidents of adverse reactions, ranging from psychiatric and cardiac disorders to "injuries" and eye disorders have also been reported to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
Ledger was found dead by his housekeeper at his New York apartment last Tuesday. Pills were found near his body and Ledger recently admitted taking the prescription drug Ambien - the trade name of zolpidem in America - to combat insomnia.
Results of a postmortem examination last week on the 28-year-old actor, who had won acclaim in films such as Brokeback Mountain, are inconclusive, but there has been speculation he died from an accidental overdose of sleeping pills.
This prompted movie star Jack Nicholson to say the tragedy could be a warning about the dangers of certain sleeping pills. Nicholson said he had taken Ambien and it had serious side effects.
During a promotional visit to London for his latest film he said: "I warn people about Ambien. I almost drove off a cliff once. I don't take sleeping pills but somebody said, take this, it's mild'.
"I got a call in the middle of the night, kind of an emergency, and I almost drove off a cliff 50 yards from my house. I live up in the mountains in Aspen. It's something to warn people about."
The figures from the MHRA show the incidents recorded under its "yellow card" scheme, which doctors use to alert the agency to patients suffering side-effects to a drug. Health professionals and patients report reactions on a voluntary basis - companies are legally obliged to do so - and it is designed to act as an early warning system to flag up any previously unrecognised problems.
A total of 197 suspected adverse drug reactions have been reported to date in connection with zolpidem - which is marketed as Stilnoct in the UK - the majority of which were categorised as psychiatric disorders.
Six cases of deaths linked to a suspected adverse reaction to the drug were also recorded - three involving psychiatric disorders, with the rest categorised as general disorders, injuries and vascular disorders.
Last year research by Australia's Federal Health Department linked zolpidem to a series of incidents of strange behaviour, including a woman who painted her front door while still asleep.
Problems involving zolpidem have emerged in America, where some people have been injured by cars driven by people under the influence of the drug.
A spokesman for the MHRA said the safety of zolpidem has been "carefully monitored" and product information had been updated to include warnings of psychiatric adverse effects.
A spokesman for Sanofi Aventis, which makes Stilnoct, said it could not comment on the MHRA figures, but said when taken as prescribed, the drug was "generally well tolerated".

The Blue Atlantic

Officials recovered 2.4 tonnes of cocaine hidden in barrels after intercepting a ship off the Liberian coast in the country's largest ever drug seizure, maritime authorities said Friday.
The crew of a French naval vessel saw people on board the ship, the Blue Atlantic, throwing barrels overboard when they went to intercept it late Thursday, said Monrovia Port Security Chief Ashford Pearl. The ship was towed to port and authorities eventually recovered 92 barrels from the ship and the sea containing a total of 2.4 tonnes of cocaine, said Pearl. "It's huge. If this had hit the Liberian market, it would have destroyed the entire country," Pearl said. With cocaine prices in Europe now double those in the United States, drug smugglers in South America are increasingly ferrying cocaine to West Africa, from where it is parceled out to hundreds of individual traffickers who carry it north, especially via Spain. Pearl said the nine members of the crew of the Blue Atlantic were Ghanaian. They have been turned over to Liberian police. "It wasn't in Liberian waters, but they towed it to Liberia because the ship was flying the flag of Liberia," said Pearl. Authorities in Liberia are not sure what to do with the drugs seized. Pearl said officials were debating burning or dumping the drugs in the water "but we are leaning closer to burning because it will have some environmental effects if we put it into the water".

Anil Tangotra G.P

Anil Tangotra, 53, portrayed himself as an eligible young bachelor and used chat-up lines and poetry to seduce two women on Shaadi.com.
The "sexual predator" told a string of lies to persuade the women, both in their early 30s, back to his home in Ilford, Essex, where he spiked their food and drink before subjecting them to brutal attacks.
advertisementA mature student from India told Snaresbrook Crown Court in east London that she was treated "like a call girl" during a night of "pain and devastation".
The other woman, a teacher, wept as she described waking from a drug-induced coma to find the married GP trying to have sex with her.
A sedative found in her bloodstream matched one found at Tangotra's home after his arrest.
Tangotra, who had a GP practice in Plaistow, east London, insisted that any sexual contact had been instigated by the women.
He was convicted of raping the student in April 2006, attempted rape and causing her to engage in sexual activity.
He was found guilty of attempting to rape the second woman in May last year, sexual assault and "assaulting her by penetration".
The court heard that in between the attacks another jury had acquitted the father of two for the first assault but could not reach verdicts on a string of other offences.
While on bail awaiting a retrial Tangotra used the same online marriage bureau to strike again.
The GP, who is going through a divorce, showed no reaction as Judge William Kennedy told him: "You were engaged in caring for the public in general practice.
"You were also a sexual predator determined to have sexual intercourse with young Indian women by whatever seduction, trickery or force became necessary.
"Had the jury not been sure of your guilt upon the evidence, the reputation of each woman within her community would have been utterly and irrevocably destroyed."
Det Sgt Adam Lowe said outside court that he was "delighted" by the sentence but believed more victims had been prevented from coming forward by fear of social stigma.
The General Medical Council has barred Tangotra from practising and he could be struck off the register.

Eva Mendes


Eva Mendes has entered a rehabilitation center to tackle substance-abuse problems, celebrity magazine People reported on its website Friday.
The 33-year-old star of "Hitch" and "We Own the Night," has been undergoing treatment at Utah's Cirque Lodge center for several weeks, the report said.
"Eva has been working hard for the past year and made a positive decision to take some much-needed time off to proactively attend to some personal issues that, while not critical, she felt deserved some outside professional support," a representative for Mendes told People. "Out of respect for Eva's privacy, we do not wish to discuss further details."
Cirque Lodge was in the headlines last year after actress Lindsay Lohan checked into the facility following dual arrests for drink-driving.
Mendes, who is of Cuban-American background, is one of the best known Latino actresses in Hollywood, having risen to prominence after landing a role with Denzel Washington in 2001 hit "Training Day."
She has starred alongside Will Smith in the romantic comedy "Hitch" and Nicolas Cage in last year's "Ghost Rider."
Later this year she will appear in a remake of "The Women," starring alongside Meg Ryan, Annette Bening, Debra Messing, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Bette Midler.

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