50 The Mail on Sunday^ September 1^ •^2019
STUDENT drug-dealers are making
thousands of pounds a week cash-
ing in on a campus craze for a lethal
cocktail of cocaine and ketamine
known as ‘Calvin Klein’, The Mail
on Sunday can reveal.
Our reporters discovered dealers
earning £4,000 a week selling stu-
dents the powerful sedative keta-
mine illegally obtained from the
internet. Combining the drug with
cocaine ‘wreaks havoc on the
brain’s chemical system and
can greatly impair overall brain
functioning’, according to a web-
site dedicated to the treatment of
ketamine abuse.
The deadly combination was
suspected of causing the death of
17-year-old violin prodigy Katya
Tsukanova at her home in Ken-
sington, West London in June
this year.
Oxford University classics stu-
dent Max Mian, 19, and 18-year-
old public schoolgirl Ellie Rowe,
from Glastonbury, Somerset,
also died after taking ketamine.
This newspaper discovered
networks of dealers operating
across the country each earning thou-
sands of pounds a week by selling the
cocktails to students.
One, 25-year-old ‘Mitch’, a recent
graduate of the University of
Birmingham, boasted that he sold
about £4,000 of ketamine each week-
end and said the popularity of the
‘Calvin Klein’ cocktail had seen sales
rocket.
‘On average, I’m selling 100 bags
across the weekend for £40 a go,’
he said. ‘More and more people want
ket. There’s a massive demand for it.
‘A lot of people take cocaine and
ketamine together.’
He buys the drug off the internet’s
‘dark web’ – a matrix of encrypted
websites – which is posted out to buy-
ers. It’s like buying clothes on Ama-
zon.’
Ian Hamilton, addiction lecturer at
the University of York, said of the
‘Calvin Klein’ combination: ‘Ketamine
is a nasty drug and then there are all
the issues around cocaine, which
strengthens the impact. This combi-
nation has become more popular in
Britain – mainly because of availabil-
ity.
‘One of the chief dangers is there’s a
timeline in terms of the effects. When
you’re younger you might be tempted
to take more when nothing has hap-
pened in the first few minutes.’
Latest figures show cocaine remains
the second most popular drug among
16- to 24-year-olds, with six per cent
taking the substance over the year –
about 361,000 young people.
Ketamine use for the same group hit
the highest numbers since records
began, showing more than three per
cent took the drug over the year.
Student dealers’ £4,000 a
week from selling deadly
‘Calvin Klein’ drug cocktail
By Jake Ryan
TRAGEDY:
17-year-old
Katya’s death
was linked to
drugs craze
S