[Contents]
[Chapter 11][Chapter
13]
Ecstasy is MDMA or, to give it the full chemical name, '3,4
Methylene-dioxy-N-methylamphetamine', pronounced 'Three-Four
Methylene Dioxy N Methyl Amphetamine'. To a chemist the name
describes what the molecule consists of. The word 'Methyl is
sometimes abbreviated to 'Meth', and the letter 'N' and numbers
'3,4' are often omitted, leaving the more usual
'Methylenedioxymethamphetamine'. (The 3,4 indicates the way in
which the components of the molecule are joined together, as it
is possible to produce an isomer which has all the same
components joined differently.) Similarly, the initials are
sometimes reduced to MDM (although this is old-fashioned) and of
course there are the various popular names such as E, Adam, X and
Empathy.
Many people believe that the name implies a mixture of
ingredients but this is wrong - just as water is not a mixture of
oxygen and hydrogen although its molecule consists of oxygen and
hydrogen atoms. Like water, MDMA is a compound, not a mixture.
So, although the name contains the word 'amphetamine' and the law
refers to MDMA as a 'psychedelic amphetamine', MDMA contains no
amphetamine. The amphetamine-like effects may be related to
dopamine release.(38, 186)
What is sold as Ecstasy in Britain is just as often MDA (3,4 Methylenedioxyamphetamine) or MDEA (3,4 Methylenedioxy-ethylamphetamine, also called MDE or Eve). Again, these are pure substances. But in addition, 'Ecstasy' often consists of various other drugs such as mixtures of LSD and amphetamine or caffeine. In America, the last figures published by Pharmchem (1985) show a similar picture - only half the samples were pure MDMA, with nearly half the remainder being MDA or MDEA while the rest was either another drug altogether or fakes.(161)
Many regular users are convinced that the quality of Ecstasy
is not as good today as it used to be. Though this may well be
true, a person's experience on E depends on several factors quite
distinct from the quality of the drug.
The first is tolerance.(34,
110, 37) If you had an
unlimited supply of absolutely pure MDMA and took the same dose
each day in the same situation, you would find that the most
smooth, open, loving experience with the least amphetamine-like
effects would be on the first dose. Each subsequent experience
will have less of the loving feeling and more speediness until,
after 5 days or so, you might as well be taking amphetamine
(speed). You would then have to stop taking MDMA for a time
before you could experience the good effects again. After a week
without MDMA, its effect will nearly be back to normal, although
to get the full effect you may have to abstain for as long as six
weeks. Even then, the experience may not be as good as your first
one - but that is probably due to being familiar with the
effect.(99) Tolerance
varies according to the individual, and to the size of dose
taken. But as a rough guide, tolerance is noticed by those who
take more than one E a week.
The second factor is your state of mind. Although this applies
less with MDMA than with many other drugs (particularly LSD), the
effect is highly responsive to your mood - in fact one of the
drug's effects is to liberate suppressed feelings. You may not
even notice that you are uncomfortable about something until the
drug takes effect.
The circumstances where you take Ecstasy influences the effect,
and it has been suggested that dancing on E may also alter the
drug's effect.(32)
Expectations also play a surprisingly large role in the effect -
people get what they expect. Everyone likes to believe that they
won't be fooled, but tests in which LSD and hash were substituted
with a placebo show that, with those drugs at least, nearly
everyone experiences what they expect.(109) Alexander Shulgin,
who wrote a book on the effects of psychedelics(2), describes how he had
an emergency operation on his thumb during the war.
Before the operation he was given a glass of orange juice with
white powder at the bottom which immediately sent him unconscious
- later he was told the powder was sugar!
Nevertheless, the overall quality of Ecstasy has gone down over
the years. When Ecstasy first hit England, it was brought by
enthusiasticusers from the USA for their friends, and so tended
to be pure and strong. Now it comes mainly from illicit factories
in Holland and is distributed for profit by entrepreneurs. It may
be less good because:
1. It is weaker. Dr. Les King, who is in charge of testing
samples of drugs seized by the police, has the impression that
the strength of tablets and capsules has gone down by 10-20% over
the past couple of years.(54)
2. It is MDA, not MDMA. There is as much MDA seized as MDMA(54), and this produces
less of the warm, empathic feelings, although it is so similar to
MDMA that much has been sold as Ecstasy without anyone realising.
The most obvious distinction is that MDA lasts twice as long, 8
to 12 hours.
3. It is MDEA, not MDMA. MDEA appeared on the market in 1992 and
the proportion of street sales of Ecstasy that are actually MDEA
is rising.(54) MDEA is
quite similar to MDMA but most people who have compared the two
drugs do not like it as much, saying that they are not able to
communicate as well or that they feel more stoned and less
clear-headed. It lasts the same time as MDMA, 3 to 5 hours.
4. It is a mixture of the above drugs. Many people believe that
the effects they experience are due to mixtures ("That one
had a bit more speed in it") but in fact mixtures involving
MDMA-type drugs are rare.(54)
5. It is a cocktail of drugs designed to substitute for MDMA.
When MDMA is in short supply, dealers have been known to produce
mixtures which they hope will produce similar effects, such as
LSD and amphetamine.(54)
The effect of this combination lacks all of the warmth and
empathy of MDMA and the LSD component lasts for twice as long.
6. It is simply speed. In Holland, 15% of street samples of
"Ecstasy" consisted of amphetamine and/or caffeine.(21)
7. It is a fake. About 10% of 'drugs' seized by police turn out
to contain no active ingredient at all. This proportion has not
changed over the years.(54)
8. It has been contaminated by a poison. This is one of the ideas
loved by the tabloid press who have suggested that addictive
drugs have been added to pills, a variation of 'the dope peddler
who gives the kids free samples to get them addicted' shock
horror story. Another variation says that rat poison or broken
glass has been found in pills. Lab tests on samples here and
abroad have found no such contaminants.(54)
9. The MDMA was badly manufactured and contains chemicals with
nasty effects. This is a possibility, but has not been supported
by analysis of samples.(54)
Another reason sometimes given is that, in addition to tolerance,
the effects of the drug change with repeated use, but this was
not found to be the case in trials of MDMA on psychiatrists.(26)
It is not possible to identify MDMA without equipment. Most
people judge by the appearance as some 'brands' have a good
reputation, but beware of fakes. Lookalike pills can always be
distinguished when compared side by side, but its hard to be sure
later. Its a good idea to examine each pill very carefully and
remember features that are hard to copy such as precise details
of the design pressed into the pill. Capsules are obviously far
more dodgy, as the same ones may contain different powders which
may look similar. The only clue is then taste, and so its a good
idea to get to know and remember what good E tastes like.
In Holland, there are several 'safe houses' with which the police
have agreed not to interfere, where people can take drugs for
analysis.(112) (See Appendix 6 on page 310.) The Dutch
government even pays people to buy samples of street drugs and
send them in for analysis so that the results can be published(21). However, there is no
legal way to have a pill tested in England.
There is a laboratory reagent called Marquis that consists of
sulphuric acid and formaldehyde which I have seen used in
Amsterdam for testing drugs brought in by dealers (wrongly
described in MixMag as a machine for testing Ecstasy). It shows a
dark colour with MDA, MDMA and MDEA, but also turns dark with
many prescription drugs and even some paper, so is not a reliable
test, especially when used by inexperienced people. However,
regular users of Marquis claim to be able to acquire the skill to
distinguish between several drugs including amphetamine, which
shows orange, from MDMA which shows a darker colour, or
brown/black-purple.(54)
A drug testing kit is marketed by British Drug Houses and Merck
(product code 321761, price about #35). This consists of 40
ampoules of Marquis; to use it you break off the neck of an
ampoule and drop in a tiny bit of the drug. The instructions say
that within a minute the Marquis turns violet with opiates and
'yellow/orange/brown' with amphetamines and MDMA-type drugs.
Absence of colour indicates none of these drugs are present, and
this is what it is used for - as a quick way to check whether a
suspect tablet does not contain an illicit drug.
The method used to detect MDMA (and other drugs) is called chromatography. The principle is akin to the coloured rings around a drop of ink as it spreads out on a piece of paper: under controlled conditions, different drugs form characteristic rings. Equipment is set up to test for various drugs by seeing whether characteristic bands are produced, and the method can be used to test samples of pills and to detect the presence of drugs like MDMA in blood and urine. At the National Poisons Unit there is a fair sized laboratory equipped with chromatography testing machines of various types. Each machine is dedicated to looking for a particular drug or poison. Some drugs, like cannabis, can be detected up to "five weeks after a single reefer", while LSD is very hard to detect. MDMA can be detected the day after it is taken and sometimes longer.(30)
Pure MDMA is a white crystalline solid. When the crystals are too small to see it looks like a fine powder, but they are often large enough to sparkle and its possible to grow giant crystals up to a gram. The powder tends to stick to a dry finger but without forming lumps. It is chemically stable so that is does not decompose in air, light or heat - i.e. it has a long shelf life, unlike LSD.(141) It dissolves in water but does not absorb dampness from the air. MDMA has a distinct, strong and rather bitter, taste.
There is very little MDMA manufactured for medical use(169), so that (unlike
amphetamine) what is sold on the black market is also
manufactured illicitly.
Most of what is sold as Ecstasy in Britain comes from Holland.
The reason is simple: the sentences for supplying drugs in
Holland are lower than other countries and the prisons are more
comfortable. It is far less risky to smuggle drugs into England
than to set up manufacturing facilities here. The trend is
towards manufacture in Eastern countries where the materials and
equipment are more easily available and bribes will avoid
imprisonment. However, the methods are well known(2, 163, 189) and there are small
scale manufacturers everywhere.
One group told me about the problems of manufacturing from their
point of view.(167)
Far from being an easy way to make money, it sounded like a
nightmare of problems from explosions to paranoia. Suppliers are
meant to inform police, so materials had to be bought at inflated
prices for 'cash and no questions', but this always left them
open to blackmail. The synthesis produced poisonous fumes and
sometimes they had to evacuate when things got out of control,
returning to find their valuable product dripping from the
ceiling. Sometimes fumes billowed out in white clouds and could
be smelled miles away. Even selling it was a problem carrying far
more risks - and less money - than they had expected.
I have spoken to two people who have visited clandestine
factories in Holland.(21,
112) One described a
small operation producing MDMA in a private home: the equipment
was ex-industrial, consisting of an autoclave and a 14,000 rpm
mixer. Neither of the two operatives were chemists, although one
had worked in a hospital laboratory. They had no previous
experience, they simply taught themselves from books and papers
in public libraries. They were cautious about buying the
materials, so ordered them separately from suppliers in different
countries. The cost of setting up the factory - about #70,000 -
came from a criminal who wanted to get into the drug business. It
took the operatives six weeks to make a batch, with many
failures, but they said they could have done it in far more
easily with the right equipment.
Very few clandestine factories have been discovered in Britain.
One, in a shed in a garden centre, was found to be producing a
batch of 20 kgs - enough for 200,000 tablets - every 24-36
hours.(89)
The manufacturing process produces a raw substance of which
between 80% and 95% is MDMA. Incomplete synthesis results in a
brownish colour.(110)
A filler, composed of an inactive compound such as china clay, is
then added to bind the pills and to make them bigger. Pills
typically weigh between 200 mg and 600 mg each, of which only 100
mg is MDMA.(54)
Sometimes a colour is added. Speckled effects are produced by
mixing different colours of filler, giving the false impression
that the pill contains several active ingredients.
Pill-making is an art in itself: if the pills are too solid, they
may be shitted out whole; if they are too soft, they may fall
apart in the mouth - the pressure and filler have to be well
controlled. Commercial drug manufacturers use a small piston
which forces the ingredients against a die at high pressure,
producing a hard, smooth tablet. The die is engraved with a logo
or name and can be changed according to the type of pill. Like
the big drug companies, clandestine manufacturers use a die to
identify their 'brand'. Word soon gets round that a particular
brand is good, but before long fake lookalikes are sold and the
brand loses its reputation. Brands therefore typically have a
life of only three to six months.(54) A single factory will
produce different brands for export so as to reduce the risk of
being traced.(112)
Because many Ecstasy pills are badly made, pills such as aspirin
are sometimes rubbed down to remove their markings and give them
the look of illicit manufacture before being sold as fake
Ecstasy.(113) Some
Ecstasy is also sold as a loose powder or in capsules; this
probably comes from small manufacturers who do not have the
pill-making equipment.
As much MDA and ???MDEA is sold in Britain as MDMA. MDA is easier
to make since it is a half-way stage in one method of
manufacturing MDMA, and requires fewer controlled precursors than
MDMA. The reason so much MDEA was produced in Holland is because
it was legal until 30th July 1993.(160) Police action to
prevent manufacture in Britain follows the principle of
encouraging the suppliers of precursor chemicals to inform the
police of suspicious orders. A new law making it illegal to
manufacture or supply precursor chemicals means the suppliers
could also be prosecuted.(114)
Illicit laboratories raided to date have all been discovered by
tip-offs from informants.(14)
According to the police(89),
the typical drug dealer nowadays is a middle-aged criminal who
has been in prison many times and probably committed armed
robberies when he was younger. Police say that the pattern has
changed, and that this kind of person never used to get involved
in the drugs trade. The Mafia and other gangs of organised
criminals are not suspected. This view is supported in a book
called Traffickers by Nicholas Dorn.(115) Dorn says that, far
from fitting the popular image of organised crime under the
direction of "Mr Big", in Britain there are no drug
barons and relatively little corruption. Drug dealing is, in
fact, 'disorganised crime'.
According to Dorn, there are seven distinct types of dealer, but
the situation is fluid; individuals change their method of
operation, making it very difficult for the police who, he says,
are less flexible in their methods.
At the top end are those who will organise production, such as
the criminals who put up #70,000 to set up a factory in Holland.
Then there are wholesalers, criminals who buy by the kilo for
#20,000 or so (#2 per dose). They sell on to the middle men who
buy a thousand Es at a time for #3 to #5 each and re-sell by the
hundred at about #8 per E to the dealers who sell to the public
at about #15 each, though often these are bought in batches of
ten or so at a small discount (such as one or two 'free'
tablets). Recently I've had reports of street prices as low as
#814 and #9.(79) The
price of illicit drugs does not bear the same relation to the
cost of production as does the price of legal drugs. Instead,
prices seem to start as high as the market will bear but then
stay at that figure, defying inflation, or actually falling over
time.(40)
A large proportion of the retail trade is conducted by people
buying for their friends without making a profit, although
usually gaining a few free tablets for their own consumption.
Then there are the dealers who are trusted as connoisseurs of the
drug, and will describe the subtle qualities of the particular
batch from personal experience. This type of dealer never sells
to the public but only to regular clients who respect them, so
the dealer cannot afford to provide poor quality.
Another variation, more common among working class men, is for
friends to arrange a meeting place, usually a pub, before a rave.
One person knows of a supply and collects money on behalf of the
others, then returns with the drugs which cost each person less
than if they had bought separately.(40) This method carries
more risk, either of losing your money or of getting poor
quality. The person buying for the others also runs the risk of
far greater penalties, see chapter 7.
A more commercial form of supply is by individuals who buy 100 or
so and are either 'known' at certain clubs, or go around offering
them for sale. They may be honest, especially if they are known,
but they may also be selling fake Es. A new trend is for 'retail
specialists' to sell in a club or at a rave. These are organised
gangs, but probably not part of a large syndicate. They cooperate
with security staff or the promoters of raves and clubs, and
occasionally, so I have been told, with the police. The club or
rave organisers put on a show of heavy security, searching people
on their way in so as to exclude dealers. This leaves the way
open for the gang to sell inside. Some members go around asking
people if they want to buy drugs without carrying stock
themselves so that, if arrested, they will not be accused of
'supply' and may get off with a fine. The stock and money is
carried by members who are well protected by body guards, and
lookouts warn of police activity inside and outside the venue.
They have contingency plans worked out in case of a surprise
raid, for example members who are free of drugs might cause a
fight so as to attract the attention of the police while those
carrying drugs and money escape.
Regular ravers tell me that such an operation frequently exists
when there is tight security on entry and can easily be observed,
yet the police hardly ever attempt to arrest such gangs. I am
told that drugs sold this way are generally low quality and are
sometimes fake.
A report by Dr. Newcombe of Manchester University suggests that
"It would be unrealistic to expect any strategy to
substantially reduce the use of drugs at raves", but he does
suggest that police attention should be directed towards such
gangs. He also believes the gangs are responsible for selling bad
quality drugs.(33)
[Contents]
[Chapter 11][Chapter
13]
E is for Ecstasy by Nicholas Saunders (nicholas@ecstasy.org)
HTMLized by Lamont Granquist (lamontg@u.washington.edu)
E for Ecstasy by Nicholas Saunders
HTMLized by Lamont Granquist (lamontg@u.washington.edu)