LONDON (Reuters) - The so-called "club drug" ecstasy is more likely than other stimulants like speed or crystal meth to kill young, healthy people who are not known as regular drug users, British ...
A federal law enacted to combat the use of "club drugs" such as Ecstasy—and today's variation known as Molly—has failed to reduce the drugs' popularity and, instead, has further endangered users by ...
Illegal use of ketamine as a party drug has more than tripled in just four years, according to experimental scientific tests carried out for the Home Office. Boffins analysed samples of waste water ...
Since emerging in prominence on the party scene in the 1980s, ecstasy has become a staple of festival and rave culture. But the drug also carries far more risks today than it did back then − and some ...
Mumbai: The chargesheet in the Goregaon drugs case, in which two MBA students died in April, has alleged that 2,800 Ecstasy ...
Late at night in a city dance club, pulsating lights brighten the ink-black room. A DJ in a corner booth blasts electronic music.