The Borneo Post

Breaking Bad: Japan professor ‘made students produce Ecstasy’

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TOKYO: A Japanese university professor could face up to 10 years in jail after allegedly getting his students to produce Ecstasy, officials said yesterday, in an echo of TV hit series ' Breaking Bad'.

Authoritie­s suspect the 61year-old pharmacolo­gy professor from Matsuyama University in western Japan got his pupils to make MDMA – commonly known as Ecstasy – in 2013 and another so- called ‘ designer drug' 5FQUPIC last year.

The professor told investigat­ors he was aiming to further the “education” of his pharmaceut­ical sciences students, an official from the local health ministry told AFP.

The Ecstasy allegedly produced has not been found and has “probably been discarded,” added this official, who asked to remain anonymous.

If charged and convicted, he could face 10 years behind bars.

Japanese law states that a researcher needs a licence issued by regional authoritie­s to manufactur­e narcotics for academic purposes.

The synthetic drug MDMA acts as a stimulant and hallucinog­en and is the main ingredient in party drug Ecstasy, giving users a heightened sense of energy, empathy and pleasure.

It has recently been used in research trials exploring its effectiven­ess in treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

5F- QUPIC is banned in Japan in 2014 after it was suspected of causing traffic accidents.

It is unclear if there were any other similariti­es between the case of the Matsuyama University professor and that of Walter White, the fictitious hero of ‘Breaking Bad'.

White, played by Bryan Cranston, was a former chemistry teacher diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer who starts manufactur­ing crystal methamphet­amine to pay for his treatment and provide for his family – sometimes with the help of a former pupil. — AFP

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