April 9, 2008
Party pills and their legal status
Party pills and their legal status are often in the news. Matt Bowden of Stargate International, the original developer of such pills and now an industry spokesperson, is regularly consulted when issues involving party pills arise in the public arena. At one stage Prime television news presenter Alison Mau went so far as to test the effects of certain party pills. A clinical trial by ClubStargate for a pill named Ease was suspended because it contained methylone, which falls under New Zealand analogue laws.
Although sold through several types of retail businesses, New Zealand has classified party pills as a “Restricted Substance” by the Misuse of Drugs Act and restricted to those over 18 years.[1]. For more on the legal issues posed by party pills, see benzylpiperazine.
In late June 2007, BZP was classed as a Class D in New Zealand drug and its availability was banned by a law passed on 13 March 2008, with a six month amnesty period.[2] As a result, many critics believe this will result in handing back power to organized crime, as young people will revert to the illegal drug MDMA, otherwise known as ecstasy. Despite prohibition never traditionally working, New Zealand’s status as one of the last countries in the world to offer BZP legally has now dissolved. Critics claim the two most damaging drugs in terms of self harm, alcohol and tobacco, are still legal because it is engrained too deep in society to ban.[1] Do the party pills have any bad side-effects? The party pills are composed of powerful herbs & natural elements and there have been clinical studies conducted to show that there are no known long term side-effects from these pills.