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While there are an increasing number of apps designed to help drug and alcohol users in recovery , drug dealers are also taking advantage of apps to increase their customer base. In a article for the Guardian, Leah Borromeo monstris explored the use of such mainstream apps as Instagram, Tinder, Kik and Depop for drug dealing. I have just 4 April updated the post with another app running in to legal challenges — weedmap. On Instagram, people looking to buy drugs simply search via hashtags such as weed4sale or the names of the drugs themselves mdma, mephedrone etc. The customer then contacts the owner of the account and the deal moves along through direct messages. In the case of Tinder, potential customers can swipe through profiles until they find a dealer and match with them. Buyers can either meet face-to-face or pay online and have their purchases posted to them. While online payments such as bitcoin and pre-paid gift cards such as Vanilla Visa are encrypted, Ms Borromeo says that more traceable measures such as unattributed bank transfers and PayPal are also used. In the UK, this means of selling New Psychoactive Substances or legal highs will soon probably be illegal once the government decides to implement the New Psychoactive Substance Act. It should have come into force on 6 April and is now scheduled for some time in Spring this year — the reasons for the delay are set out in this Guardian article by Alan Travis. In addition to the mis use of mainstream apps, there are also a number of apps dedicated to accessing drugs. For a full rundown, check out this article by Annie Lesser but dedicated apps which piqued my interest for their ingenuity and entrepreneurship include:. Weedmaps sometimes called Yelp for pot the smartphone app Weedmaps enables users to locate dispensaries and delivery services selling the green stuff. The company has been among the breakout success stories of legalization thus far. While federal illegality in the US makes it very difficult for a company to sell cannabis in more than one state, Weedmaps faces no such constraints. When a visitor lands in Portland, Denver or San Francisco, they might not know the local dispensary or product names, but they know to check Weedmaps to find out. Responding to Ajax, Weedmaps did something almost unheard of for a cannabis company: it politely told the regulator to get lost. Nestdrop started as an alcohol delivery service before morphing into an app to help you get medical marijuana delivered. With MyDx, you can find the perfect strain to fit any mood. The device and app developers behind MyDx are also working to apply this technology to test food and water for unwanted chemicals as well as air quality. This app is basically Tinder for stoners. You enter your energy level when on weed, what you want to do with the other party chat, go out, or stay in and list the activities you enjoy when high. When there are so many apps out there to help people access drugs more easily, the value of the work by the Global Drug Survey becomes even more obvious. GDS drugs meter app allows users to see how their drug use compares to other people just like them, offering objective, personalised feedback that takes their personal features in to account. With an overview of total drug use and in depth analysis for nine drugs at present, drugs meter gives objective feedback informed by medical experts. It is committed to giving honest, accurate information. All data is anonymous, secure and cannot be traced back to any individual. Please share any drug apps that you think may be of particular interest via the comments section below. Fascinating insights into changes in drug and alcohol taking behaviour during the global pandemic — interim findings from Global Drug Survey. GDS provides new data on the latest drug trends and crucial public health and policy issues, as well as a range of fascinating facts. The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction surveys the latest apps responding to drug use and associated harms. Submit your job opportunities here Contact me Advent Quiz. Click to Subscribe. Using apps to buy and sell drugs. Russell Webster April 19, While there are an increasing number of apps designed to help drug and alcohol users in recovery, drug dealers are also taking advantage of apps to increase their customer base. Share This Post. Related posts. Drug and alcohol use during coronavirus Fascinating insights into changes in drug and alcohol taking behaviour during the global pandemic — interim findings from Global Drug Survey. Seven things I learnt from the Global Drug Survey GDS provides new data on the latest drug trends and crucial public health and policy issues, as well as a range of fascinating facts. Smartphone apps for problem drug users The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction surveys the latest apps responding to drug use and associated harms. Drug and alcohol treatment goes digital Substance misuse treatment providers embrace digital for a better user experience. Eight things I learnt from the Global Drug Survey GDS provides new data on the latest drug trends and crucial public health and policy issues, as well as a range of fascinating facts. I am currently on recovery. I am on treatment with methadone. Twitter Facebook-f Linkedin-in Youtube. Back to Top. Consent Management Privacy Policy. Privacy Policy Required. You read and agreed to our Privacy Policy. Get every blog post by email for free. First Name. Last Name. No Thanks.

Checking in to Europe's largest illegal drugs supermarket

Madrid buy Ecstasy

But moving through the crowds of commuters and traders are a different kind of people - mostly over 40, with battered baseball caps and grey, dusty jackets, their shoes are beaten-up and their gait slouching. They band together on a bench outside the Metro station and opposite the El Portillo bar, where they shout at each other. One from their group stands up and walks along the kerb of the ring-road, checking his phone, and glancing between the heads of people and the sides of vehicles. He is searching for a driver. In the last two decades, this thoroughfare has seen a boom in shanty-huts and squatters. Every day, users travel by taxi from Madrid to the zone to inject or smoke heroin, before returning to the capital. The cundero - the driver - wants to fill up his cab with as many junkies as he can, so will not move until his car is full. We approach the users on the bench, and mention we are from the press. They scream out, stand up and, as a group, race to our side. As we turn to them, they back off, as though we have the power to hurt them with our gaze. Another man in his 50s, in tattered denim, round glasses and a knotted green necktie ambles up to us. His name is Luis. They started coming three or four years ago. Compared to the other users, when they take drugs, they are more vicious. We go off in search of the Romanians. So we need the help of a priest. In a short white beard, sunglasses and an open shirt, the 53 year-old is a reformed addict and evangelical priest who takes food to drug users and the homeless. We tell him we are looking for Romanians, so we can report on this new trend in east European addicts in Madrid. Chickens are snacking on scraps in the dust. A rat is scuttling alongside a wall. The buildings facing the road are formed of breeze blocks covered in white plaster. Children walk around in barefeet, playing on smartphones. Facing the road, on red plastic chairs branded with Estrella - the beer of Barcelona - are the men of the Spanish Roma, in tight-fitting t-shirts, with rounded bellies and thick moustaches curled at the end. Heavy-set women in headscarves, loose-fitting tops, flowery dresses, and with large golden ear-rings step out from the pavement and come up to the car. On the passenger side, one knocks on the window with a strong bang. We are from Romania, and we think they are Romanian. We make that assumption. But they are not. They are Spanish. We turn onto a car park of cement and pebbles. Cars rattle across the stones - the cundas - packed with junkies paying five Euro a piece. On a hill at the top of the car park is a white-plastered Catholic Church, with a thin and tall wooden cross. Rubbish is piled up on an escarpment to the side. On the ground are flattened miniature cans of Mahou - the beer of Madrid - and a pink toy of the muppet Elmo, covered in white dust. Inside are bags of doughnuts, yoghurt, and bottles of lemonade and water. Users begin to emerge from the street and tents. Some in their 40s or 50s, their bodies wrought tight from decades of injections. They shuffle up, and crowd around the back of the van. A man in long black curly hair walks near to us, with sunken cheeks, bulbous muscles in his arms, carrying a cane, and resembling a disabled 70s roadie. He drops a doughnut on the floor, reaches down, picks it up and throws it behind the van. A thin greyhound appears and smells the snack, but leaves it alone. He is with his grandfather and a tatty stroller for toddlers. The kid piles the vehicle up with food. She is in dreadlocks, bent over, her eyes pressed out from her skull. She carries all the food from the van in a Carrefour bag. She could be anywhere between 40 and 80 years old. This happens to people who take heroin and the poison dealers cut it with. No one is sure of her nationality. Someone says a former British colony. So we ask in English. Zone where anything goes, but tight control by local mafia, and constant oversight from police: Users in Canada Real. Carlos is an ex-user. With decades of experience. The police do not arrest people for using, and if they catch people selling, this is a crime. But here, everyone is in business. Wholesalers sell to smaller dealers, who then go to the city to hawk the merchandise. And it is not abandoned by the city. The police pass by in patrol cars every 30 minutes. Even rat poison. If someone tells them they can inject this, they inject it. These people are not selective. Gheorghe is in his late 20s, bearded, and in a black jacket and slacks. He is chirpy, talkative, but cannot stop for long. Why is he here? They guard the gate and watch if the police are getting intrusive, shouting back to the dealers if the cops are closing in. Standing in a bandana and sandals, with his feet wrapped in bandages is Ioan, also from Bucharest. Because of an infection, he needs to change the bandages every two days. But the priest dismisses the demand. He will not give him any new shoes. Ioan is annoyed. He shouts at himself, like a spurned child. Walking around the car park, Ioan looks back at us, disappears, then re-emerges at a distance, still observing us, as we observe him. Eventually he walks back over to us - and says he will talk. We sit behind the van and crouch down. He lives by himself in a tent behind the Catholic church. He spends around 30 to 40 Euro per day on heroin. He tried to quit at some point, and went to a rehab centre, but when he failed to stay clean, they kicked him out. But soon we didn't have any money for rent, so I started stealing. The police arrested him for thieving in Barcelona, where he was tried and convicted. The Spanish authorities sent him back to Romania. In , he was caught again for pickpocketing. He spent three years in jail in Romania. I have one sister in Germany, and another in England. A patrol car moves into the park. It passes by a cunda moving in the opposite direction. Two young cops are seated up front. The car stops, and the policeman get out and start talking to some men standing up against a wall. Fewer users are coming to the van for the food. The doughnuts and the lemonade have gone. Only some water and yoghurt is left. Mostly heroin and cocaine. His first marriage failed because of drugs, and soon he ended up living under a bridge with a new wife in Torregrosa, a Madrid hub in the 80s and 90s for dealing. There - if you had an overdose, instead of helping you, the people would rob you. Inaki would steal handbags, break into pharmacies and traffic in drugs. He was a chorizo. Back then people would re-use needles up to 30 times and HIV ripped through Torregrossa, killing hundreds. He has been convicted to prison four times, the last time for eight years - but he did not serve the full sentence. One day begging in Salamanca, a man approached him. This is what he said:. Do you know the difference between desire and love? God is love and God loves you. If you love your wife, you want to be happy with her, and if you love your wife, you want her to be happy with you. One year later he was still living under the bridge with his wife, on a mattress infected with lice. Then the words of the man he met on the street came back to him. At the same time he recalled a verse from The Bible, Matthew That night he and his wife lit candles either side of their mattress. Then they binged on drugs. They were convinced it would be the last night of their lives. Sweet, pure and sublime tenderness. My life flashed before my eyes. I did not feel condemned, but loved by God. I spent two hours lying there. It was a new kind of high. That morning he and his wife checked into separate rehab clinics. They kept in touch once a month via the telephone. I do not go into this place I do not meet these people as a user, but to give food. For three decades, the organisation he works for - Remar - has been coming here to donate food. Now he sees different generations of drug addicts - the older Spanish and Latin American users, some from other ex-colonies, and the younger ones, including those from Romania, Ukraine and Bulgaria, as well as Moroccans and Algerians, many of whom start using when they come to Spain. The air is dusty. Night comes fast in September. The sound of a muezzin calls from over the escarpment. I ask if there is a mosque nearby. I look over the edge of ridge. A group of tents. The melody is louder. The call to prayer is from a radio. Some men in their 30s are standing up against a plaster wall in the car park. One of them picks up a door from a rubbish tip. He moves over to the remains of a charred bonfire at the edge of the car park. He throws the door down. Then he walks back over to the rubbish tip and picks up another door. He places this on its side, and leans the first door against it. He takes a flask and pours on some gasoline, clicks open a lighter, and watches the flames flare up. Now he smokes heroin. We ask how much the cunda costs. Are they coming here now? He pauses and looks down. We ask if he would like to speak to us. He has contracted Hepatitis C. It flared up at some point. Ioan arrived in Spain in , with his sister and sister-in-law. Ten metres away another bonfire explodes into the air. Further away in the distance the sparks of another fire can be seen. This is the signal that they are selling.

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