(The following is a copy of the text on Insight Magazine and is here
published to pass on the info to a german audience, which is
vital, as is the work of lawyer John DeCamp which is not in the public
domain in the german-speaking countries. For any copyright issues
please contact the author of these pages.)
"Someone has
to do something about these drugs, because too many people are dying."
SSRI
Antidepressants probably Trigger
Killings
By
Kelly Patricia
O'Meara
The kid spoke unsteadily: "I was sitting on a hill outside the school
eating lunch with my best friend when Eric Harris came over and started
shooting me. I was shot between seven and 13 times. No one really knows
the exact number because there were so many bullet tracks. Most of the
bullets just went right through me. After I was shot I just lay there,
playing dead, and could see others being shot." These are the
recollections of 19-year-old Mark Taylor, who spent nearly two months
in the hospital and has endured three years of follow-up operations for
the gunshot wounds he received during the murderous 1999 rampage of
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold at Columbine High School in Littleton,
Colo. Taylor slowly is recovering from his wounds and, in an effort to
bring attention to what he believes was the cause of Harris' deadly
rage, has filed a lawsuit against
Solvay
Pharmaceuticals Inc., the manufacturer of Luvox (Fluvoxamine),
the antidepressant that Harris had been prescribed and was taking at
the time of the shooting spree. Despite the deadly assault against him,
Taylor's perception of the young men who nearly killed him is
surprising. Taylor tells Insight, "I'm suing Solvay because I believe
that Eric Harris did what he did because of this drug. I didn't
personally know Eric, but I knew him as one of the 'Trench Coat Mafia.'
Everybody thought Eric and Dylan were the nicest people. My cousin, who
was in Eric's class, told me that Eric and Dylan used to bring her
flowers and cookies. Eric was forced onto these drugs and I feel sorry
for him, like so many other kids who are put on these drugs. I don't
have ill feelings against him since I don't think you can hold him
accountable, because he didn't know what he was doing." Taylor's
lawsuit against Solvay claims that the mind-altering drug Luvox was the
cause of Harris' rampage — that the drug made Harris manic
and psychotic. Luvox is in a class of antidepressants called selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) that interact with the
serotonergic system in the brain, as do Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil.
Street drugs that interact with the serotonergic system include LSD and
Ecstasy. The Food and Drug Administration approved Luvox in 1997 for
treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder in children, but not for
treatment of depression. The Physicians Desk Reference (PDR) records
that, during controlled clinical trials of Luvox, manic reactions
developed in 4 percent of children. Mania is defined as "a form of
psychosis characterized by exalted feelings, delusions of grandeur
… and overproduction of ideas." Court records show that the
prescription for Harris had been filled 10 times between April 1998 and
March 1999, and that three-and-a-half months before the shooting the
dose had been increased — a common thread many experts say
they are finding prior to adverse reactions to psychotropic drugs. The
autopsy on Harris revealed a "therapeutic level" of Luvox in his
system. Other school shooters on antidepressants at the time of their
attacks include 15-year-old Kip Kinkel who, while on Prozac, killed his
parents and then proceeded to school where he opened fire on
classmates, killing two and wounding 22 others; 14-year-old Elizabeth
Bush, on "antidepressants" when she wounded one student at Bishop
Neumann High School in Williamsport, Pa.; and 18-year-old Jason
Hoffman, on Effexor and Celexa when he wounded one teacher and three
students at Granite Hills High School in El Cajon, Calif. The medical
histories of scores of "school shooters" have not been revealed,
allegedly to protect the minor child. Ann Blake Tracy is a consultant
in Taylor's lawsuit and director of the International Coalition for
Drug Awareness. She holds a doctorate in biological psychology and is a
specialist in what she believes are the adverse reactions to SSRI
medications.
She says
Luvox caused Harris to go on the Columbine shooting spree and thinks
the medical history of children who commit violent acts in school
should be made public. "Suing Solvay for the injuries Mark Taylor
suffered is one of the biggest SSRI suits we'll ever see," Tracy says.
"It's a pivotal case because what happened at Columbine was so big.
It's really crazy when you think about it. All you have to do is read
the Luvox package insert to see that Eric's actions were due to an
adverse reaction to this drug. Show me a drug anywhere that has listed
mania and psychosis as frequent adverse reactions. That is what the
insert says for Luvox. There is no doubt in my mind that Luvox caused
Eric Harris to commit these acts." The PDR lists adverse
reactions of Luvox to the nervous system as: "FREQUENT: amnesia,
apathy, hyperkinesis, hypokinesis, manic reaction, myoclonus, psychotic
reaction; "INFREQUENT: agoraphobia, akathisia, CNS depression,
convulsion, delirium, delusion, depersonalization, drug dependence,
emotional liability, euphoria, hallucinations, hostility, hysteria,
incoordination, increased salivation, increased libido, paralysis,
paranoid reaction, phobia, psychosis, sleep disorder, stupor,
twitching, vertigo." Tracy continues, "Beyond the adverse reactions
listed about Luvox, one of the first clues I had that these boys were
on antidepressants was when it was made public that Eric [Harris] and
Dylan Klebold had both been in anger-management classes.
Anger-management classes equal antidepressants. Unfortunately, Dylan
Klebold's medical records have been sealed, so there's no way of
knowing what if anything he was on, but it makes sense that if he was
in anger-management classes he was prescribed some antidepressant." The
problem, Tracy concludes, "is that this is a public-safety issue. So
why is everything kept so secret, under lock and key? This information
should be made available to the public so that people can learn from it
and maybe we can stop this kind of tragedy from happening in the
future. We've got a nightmare on our hands with these drugs, an
absolute nightmare. We've got kids on these drugs that are ticking time
bombs in every school in America. Most of these drugs are not approved
for children, but it doesn't stop doctors from prescribing them. Laws
should be passed requiring that this medical information be made
public. And states should demand toxicology reports for drugs of this
kind in all murders and suicides." Donald Marks specializes in internal
medicine, has a doctorate in microbiology and has worked in
pharmaceutical research for more than a decade in the area of drug
safety and clinical research. Marks was brought into the Solvay lawsuit
as an expert by Taylor and is not surprised that there may be a causal
relationship between Luvox and Harris' murderous behavior. Marks also
testified in a Wyoming case last year involving a murder related to the
SSRI Paxil in which the defendant won an $8 million judgment against
GlaxoSmithKline, maker of Paxil. As part of the Columbine lawsuit,
Taylor claims that Solvay failed to warn adequately of the risks and
adverse reactions associated with Luvox, and Marks provides a
preliminary expert opinion to the court stating that Solvay "acted in
an unreasonable manner" by failing to provide adequate warnings of the
adverse reactions to the drug. The Marks opinion continues: "In view of
the evidence of a strong and likely causal relationship between SSRI
medications, of which Luvox is one, and akathisia/suicide/homicide,
Solvay should only have marketed this drug with prominent warnings and
cautionary statements." U.S. District Court Judge Clarence Brimmer has
accepted Marks' preliminary report, allowing the case to go forward and
giving the expert access to information that has been held under lock
and key in a vault in Denver since the Columbine shooting. Marks tells
Insight that "the preliminary report was based on what I know from past
cases, because I haven't been allowed to examine information about Mr.
Harris or anyone who knew him. The information has been locked in a
room in Denver, and I haven't been allowed in the room until now."
According to Marks, "The real problem is that physicians, of which I am
one, are not told that there is a potential for a causal relationship
between these drugs and homicide and suicide. Therefore we're not
educated to look for the kinds of adverse reactions that could herald
this kind of event. That's why proper warnings about such drugs are so
essential. I'm in the process of updating my report for the court, but
my preliminary impression from looking at the material is that there
very well could be a causal relationship here, that this drug could
have been a factor that tipped Harris from being a troubled teen to a
murderer." Marks says, "In the report, I talk about the adverse-event
profiles of other SSRI medications and how, in the context of rules of
evidence, a statement of general causation could be made for all SSRI
medications and how it could be applied to Luvox. The
neuro-psychiatric-event profiles of the SSRI drugs are clearly
associated with seizures and psychosis. Some have been associated with
hypoglycemia, suicide and homicide. So it's not entirely implausible
that one additional member of this class, like Luvox, would have those
same effects." The fact that the court has allowed the case to go
forward is a good sign for Taylor, but there have been some very
strange developments. Lincoln, Neb., attorney John DeCamp, who now
represents Taylor against Solvay, tells Insight that "two days after I
took the case, Solvay pulled Luvox from the market. I don't know if my
coming on the case had any bearing on them pulling the drug, but it is
interesting." (click here for Luvox announcement) Solvay announced that
the drug was being removed temporarily from the U.S. market to revise
data about how Luvox is manufactured. Another interesting twist
involves families pulling out of the lawsuit. "I am very reliably
informed," DeCamp says, "and I'm satisfied that the people telling me
this aren't lying, that at the settlement conference families were
informed that a Colorado law that applies both in federal and state
court says: 'If you lose, you pay.' These families were told that if
they continued to sue and lost the case they would be sued in return
and they'd lose their homes, cars and everything for the rest of their
lives. So if you were one of these families what would you do?"
According to DeCamp, "My client is basically judgment-proof. In other
words, Mark doesn't have anything. The other families didn't settle,
they just dropped out of the suit — they were basically told
that they were going to lose and, when it was over, the pharmaceutical
companies were going to own their lives. It's fair to say that my
client was presented with this argument, but he doesn't have anything."
The lawyer continues,
"It's
also interesting in this case that there's more security to keep
related evidence from surfacing than there is to get into the White
House or Fort Knox. I have never, in 35 years practicing law, seen its
like. There's been more evidence gathered than you can even imagine
— things that I hope one day will be made public. I stated in
court that if ever there was a monumental event this is it and the
information that is locked in this room should be made public. History
will be very unforgiving if that doesn't happen." But the
foremost question in the minds of experts on adverse reactions to SSRIs
is whether history is just repeating itself. Recent court decisions,
however, may be useful in Taylor's case against Solvay. In April 2001,
then 16-year-old Cory Baadsgaard took a rifle to Wahluke High School in
Washington state and took 23 classmates and a teacher hostage.
Baadsgaard was held in jail for 14 months. Based on expert testimony by
psychiatrists about the adverse reactions to the drugs he was taking,
he finally was released from jail under community supervision for five
years. Baadsgaard has no memory of his violent actions toward his
classmates, which took place exactly 21 days after he had been
cold-turkeyed off Paxil and switched to a high dose of Effexor (an
SSRI) to treat "situational depression." Cory's father, Jay Baadsgaard,
says, "The morning that Cory went to school and did what he did, my
wife and I just knew that it had to be something with the drugs. That
morning he had taken about 300 milligrams of Effexor, and I thought it
was something about him going off one of the drugs and then the high
dose of the other. One of Cory's friends told us that Cory was yelling
and then he just stopped, looked down and saw the gun in his hand and
woke up." There is no doubt that Cory is lucky not to have gone
further, says his father, "and I guess I could blame myself for having
the gun available, but if I'd known then just what these drugs could do
it would have been the drugs that would not have been in our home. They
always talk about how the kids who do these things are the ones who get
picked on by the jocks and stuff, but Cory was a jock. He was on the
varsity basketball team, played football and golf, and was very popular
in school. I pray every night that the media will get ahold of this
issue. If Cory had been on PCP the media would say 'Oh, he needs drug
rehabilitation,' but because these were prescribed medications they say
'Oh, it can't be that,' but now we know it can be." Taylor hopes his
lawsuit against Solvay will make people aware of the dangerous side
effects of such drugs.
"Someone,"
he says, "has to do something about these drugs, because too many
people are dying." Kelly
Patricia O'Meara is an
investigative reporter.
This text appeared in insight magazine/ wash. times (Issue:
10/01/02) and seems to be in the process of being taken off the web.
please do copy and distribute it to your friends and
acqaintances. For any copyright issues please contact the
author of these pages.