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Coasters to prevent Date Rape

Author:   Mary "Mhaire" Fraser  
Posted: 10/12/2002; 7:18:56 PM
Topic: Coasters to prevent Date Rape
Msg #: 55 (top msg in thread)
Prev/Next: /61
Reads: 11212

From the front page of the San Jose Mercury News. For more information, contact the YWCA of Santa Clara Valley (408) 295-4011.

http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/news/4073473.htm

Posted on Sat, Sep. 14, 2002 Women get tool to fight `date rape drug' use COASTER TESTS DRINKS FOR ADDED SUBSTANCES By Michelle Guido Mercury News

In an effort to prevent date rape, the YWCA of Santa Clara Valley is planning to distribute coasters that women can use to detect whether a so-called date rape drug has been slipped into a drink.

The coasters raise some questions: What about false positive tests? Do the coasters provide women with an unreasonable sense of security? Are there bars that would distribute them without fear of turning off customers? And what about women using common sense about whom they drink with?

But the coasters, YWCA officials say, could help prevent a crime that is difficult to prove afterward, because the most common date rape drugs -- Rohypnol, GHB and Ketamine -- can dissipate in about six hours and be undetectable in tests. The drugs can render a woman unconscious and vulnerable to sexual assault.

On Thursday, the Alameda County District Attorney's office dropped felony rape charges and other sex offenses against Oakland Raiders defensive lineman Darrell Russell and two of his friends. The office said it was too difficult to prove a Sunnyvale woman's accusation that they had drugged her and forced her to have sex with them, because urine tests showed no evidence of GHB in her system.

The coasters raise legitimate questions, said Sandy Davis, the YWCA's director of rape crisis. But she said they can help raise awareness about the dangers of drinking and date rape -- especially among young women, who are the most likely victims of this kind of sexual assault.

``We know it's not the end-all prevention strategy,'' Davis said. ``And we don't want women to have a false sense of security, but we're looking at this as a potentially strong deterrent.''

Davis said 5,000 coasters will be distributed to students at San Jose State University -- particularly those in sororities. And she hopes some downtown bars frequented by college-age drinkers will offer to serve them up as well. The YWCA is the first agency in California to distribute the coasters.

Lisa Marie Carlson, who was having drinks with friends at the Flying Pig Pub in San Jose one night this week, said she would not rely on the coasters.

``If strangers are buying you drinks and you're skeptical, you've already opened the door to the possibility that something might happen,'' said Carlson, 25, an assistant researcher at Stanford University. ``But I agree that it could be a deterrent for guys.''

Her friend Matt Stone thought the coasters were a good idea -- even though he would feel a little slighted if a date pulled one out of her purse to check a drink he bought for her.

``The bottom line is, what could it hurt?'' said Stone, 27. ``I firmly believe that women need to be safe. This is just indicative of the problems we have -- and those problems demand that we have these protections.''

The coasters, created by Florida-based Drink Safe Technology, measure 4 inches by 4 inches and include test areas in two corners. A drop of a drink should be placed on both test spots in one corner. If either spot changes color, a possible date rape drug has been detected. Each coaster can be used to test two drinks. The company also makes more discreet test strips, which can be slipped into drinks. The tests are not foolproof; false positives are possible.

Law enforcement officials and rape awareness groups believe the practice of covertly placing drugs in the drinks of women to knock them out and then have sex with them is a growing threat nationally -- especially on college campuses.

Lt. James Aguirre, head of San Jose Police Department's sexual assault unit, said because the drugs dissipate so quickly, it is often difficult to charge people with drug-induced rape.

``We still prosecute those cases as sexual assaults,'' he said. ``But they don't get identified as date rape drug cases.''

According to the Drug Abuse Warning Network, a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, use of date rape drugs has skyrocketed since the early 1990s. Emergency rooms in 21 of the nation's largest cities -- including San Francisco -- report that mentions of MDMA, GHB, Ketamine and Rohypnol increased from 337 in 1994 to more than 6,700 in 1999. That means one or more of those drugs was believed to have been the reason a person was taken to the emergency room.

In most cases, this is how it happens: Illicit drugs are unobtrusively slipped into the drinks of unsuspecting victims at dance parties, bars or nightclubs. The drugs -- which are colorless, tasteless and odorless -- can render someone unconscious and vulnerable to sexual assault. Victims are often left with little more than fleeting memories of the incident and little to no proof they had been drugged.

Carly Jimenez felt angry and helpless when a good friend confided that she had been sexually assaulted after a virtual stranger slipped a date rape drug into her drink at a party.

Jimenez, a public relations and Japanese major at San Jose State University and a member of Lambda Sigma Gamma sorority, is exactly the kind of young woman targeted in the YWCA's coaster campaign.

``I would have no problem using one, whether it's in front of someone or not,'' Jimenez said. ``My safety comes first.''

 Updated Saturday, October 12, 2002 at 7:18:56 PM by Mary "Mhaire" Fraser - frasermary@fhda.edu
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