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News
Release
Two Worcester Police Officers and Two Others Indicted on Drug
Trafficking Charges �Worcester,
MA... Federal drug trafficking charges were unsealed today against two
Worcester Police Officers and two other men. ����� June W. Stansbury, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in New England and United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan , announced today the unsealing of a six-count federal Indictment charging THOMAS J. VIGLIATURA, age 36, of 118 Santoro Road, Worcester, Massachusetts; MATTHEW A. MCLAUGHLIN, age 33, of 52 Braveboat Harbor Road, Kittery Point, Maine; BRIAN W. BENEDICT, age 33, of 53 Woodland Road, Auburn, Massachusetts; and HERIBERTO ARROYO, age 36, of 49 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Massachusetts.� BENEDICT and ARROYO are Worcester Police Officers.� ����� All
four defendants are charged with one count of conspiring from the Summer
of
2000 to the Summer of 2004, to distribute gamma-hydroxybutyric acid ("GHB")
and gamma butyrolactone ("GBL").� The
Indictment also charges VIGLIATURA, BENEDICT and ARROYO with one count of conspiring to possess cocaine and Ecstasy
during the same time period. VIGLIATURA is
also charged in four separate counts with possessing with intent to distribute
GHB and/or GBL. ����� GHB
is a central nervous system depressant abused because it produces euphoria,
intoxication, and hallucinations. It was originally sold in health food
stores as a releasing agent for growth hormones that would stimulate
muscle growth and was banned in 1990 by the FDA. Highly soluble, GHB
is sold in liquid form by the capful for $5 to $25 a cap and often added
to water or alcohol. In lower doses, GHB causes drowsiness, dizziness,
nausea and visual disturbances. At higher doses, unconsciousness, seizures,
severe respiratory depression and coma, can occur. Street names for the
drug include "Liquid Ecstasy", "Grievous Bodily Harm" and "Georgia
Home Boy,"� but it is best known as "the date rape
drug." GBL,
a liquid chemical used in many industrial cleaners, is also used as
a "precursor
chemical" in the manufacture of GHB. Upon ingestion GBL can also
be converted directly into
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