A photo of the pills that seem to be killing people in Ipswich, Telford, and beyond

If, as suspected, the pills that killed these men are from the same batch that first surfaced in the Netherlands and Belgium a month ago, they are some of the most dangerous pills masquerading as ecstasy known to man. Their existence is mystifying because drug suppliers, like any other businessmen, have always tended to avoid killing off their customers.It's strange for two other reasons: the first is that MDMA is easier and cheaper to get hold of right now than it has been for a decade. The second is that whoever made these could've cut them with half the amount of PMMA and they still would've got users high. (PMMA is a derivative of the highly toxic MDMA substitute, PMA, a drug that even its inventor Alexander Shulgin shunned.)The pink Superman pills found in the Low Countries contained extremely high levels – 173mg – of PMMA, effectively turning them into deadly pills. Ecstasy pills containing PMA and PMMA usually contain 50mg of the drug. Even at these levels, there were 29 deaths connected to PMA last year in England and Wales. For reference, this compares to 41 MDMA deaths over the same period, when the vast majority of pills in England and Wales contain MDMA.Police in Suffolk have charged Adrian Lubecki, a 19-year-old from Ipswich, with supplying class-A drugs. Police uncovered Lubecki's stash of 400 Superman pills but believe that Lubecki is not the only dealer in the UK who is selling them. They believe Daniel Bagnall bought his pills from a different seller than the Suffolk victims. Usually batches of pills run into tens of thousands, and the police say they will only be able to tell if the publicity around these deaths has hit home by the end of the weekend, when Britain's ecstasy users start popping their pills.
Annoncering
I spoke to Daan van der Gouwe, of the Drugs Information and Monitoring System at the Trimbos Institute in Utrecht, which put out an alert about the PMMA Superman pills on the 19th of December. He told me: "We have never seen a pill with such insanely high concentrations of PMMA or PMA. As to why someone has made this, either they are completely idiotic and made a mistake or it is a professional manufacturer who knows what they are doing and is taking advantage of the fact PMA and PMMA are cheaper to source than MDMA."It's been a common and shady practice in the fickle world of pill branding for decades, but what makes the manufacture of these deadly pills even more cynical is that they mimic a pink Superman branded pill that has previously been popular because of its high MDMA content. The same thing happened with Mortal Kombat pills last year.Van der Gouwe told me the Superman pills had popped up several times in the Netherlands in December. The Trimbos Institute decided to issue a red alert because of their "historically high" levels of PMMA. Despite this, and the fact virtually all UK ecstasy pills are supplied via Liverpool-based traffickers from the Netherlands, the only alerts put out in the UK were by The Loop, a community-based drugs information group, and the Warehouse Project, a Manchester club that provides testing facilities for pills.Police say they will only be able to tell if the publicity around these deaths has hit home by the end of the weekend, when Britain's ecstasy users start popping their pills
Annoncering