The Palm Beach Post

Students OD’d despite college’s campaign

Wesleyan cases spur universiti­es to rethink drug policy.

- By Michael Melia Associated Press

MIDDLETOWN, CONN. — As drug overdoses left two Wesleyan University students fighting for their lives, witnesses helped investigat­ors quickly identify the suspects: The drug-dealing was an open secret, according to court documents, even as the university has gotten tougher on drug violations.

The club-drug overdoses, which sent 12 people to hospitals, are likely to bring more scrutiny to drug policies on college campuses, including Wesleyan’s, which have wrestled with how to approach enforcemen­t and when to involve local police.

“I think it will force schools to examine their policies,” said state Rep. Matthew Lesser, a member of the Wesleyan class of 2005 whose district includes the Middletown campus. “It forces us to look at what we can do to make sure students are safe.”

Four students have been arrested in connection with last weekend’s overdoses, which left two students in critical con- dition. Authoritie­s say the drug was presented as Molly, a popular name for the euphoria-inducing stimulant MDMA, but was likely cut with other designer drugs.

As on other campuses, the unlawful use and distributi­on of illicit drugs is prohibited at Wesleyan, but the issue is often complicate­d by a desire to treat substance abuse as a health issue first and what some describe as society’s ambivalenc­e about the use of certain drugs.

Tucker Andersen, a Wesleyan trustee, said the administra­tion has been very thoughtful and tried to balance all the issues involved.

“This is an issue where there is no disagreeme­nt on the board. You want a policy which keeps students safe. You don’t want them to experiment with all this sort of stuff,” Andersen said. “You want to get the message out loud and clear that nobody in a position of authority is in favor of addictive and dangerous substances, but that doesn’t mean you have to close your eyes to that it’s going to occur anyway.”

The school referred 154 students for disciplina­ry action on drug violations in 2011 but that number jumped to 281 in 2012, according to data reported to the U.S. Education Department. There were 240 students discipline­d in 2013 on the campus of 3,200.

“At Wesleyan, we don’t sweep these problems under the rug,” Dean Michael Whaley said.

University President Michael Roth told the campus newspaper, The Wesleyan Argus, he does not anticipate major changes to drug policies that have been effective in “trying to point students toward making responsibl­e choices, not overly policing them, while at the same time putting up pretty clear guardrails.” An interview request from The Associated Press was denied.

A spokeswoma­n for Middletown police, Lt. Heather Desmond, said Wesleyan has been more “forthright” in recent years about involving them in drug cases. Still, she said there are cases of drug-related illnesses on campus that involve emergency medical responders, but not police.

Dispatcher­s sent police to campus to aid with the response to a 19-yearold woman who became ill after taking Molly on Sept. 13, the second of two consecutiv­e weekends in which Wesleyan students were hospitaliz­ed after taking the drug.

Desmond said police did not follow up, likely because it would be difficult to pursue a case involving an intoxicate­d woman who took a single pill. Wesleyan health officials alerted students to the hospitaliz­ations in an all-campus email that urged them to be aware of the drug’s effects and potential side effects.

As students began getting sick on the morning of Feb. 22, a witness told Wesleyan public safety that they bought what they thought was Molly from one of the four defendants in September, took half the pill and had a reaction similar to the students involved in latest incident.

Informatio­n from students, the dean’s office and public safety sources led police to the suspects, including two who were known to sell Molly from their residences, according to arrest warrants.

 ?? PATRICK RAYCRAFT / HARTFORD COURANT ?? Wesleyan University sophomore and neuroscien­ce major Zachary Kramer, 21, is one of four students arrested after a rash of illnesses on campus linked to the party drug Molly.
PATRICK RAYCRAFT / HARTFORD COURANT Wesleyan University sophomore and neuroscien­ce major Zachary Kramer, 21, is one of four students arrested after a rash of illnesses on campus linked to the party drug Molly.
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