Really, if you’ve ever been to a music festival or ever taken drugs – this could have been you.
19-year-old Rebecca Hannibal did what so many girls her age have done before her. She picked up some pills on the way to a music festival for herself and her best friend.
Tragically, for both girls, Rebecca’s best friend, Georgina Bartter, died after taking them. And now Rebecca is being charged with supplying the prohibited drug.
Following Georgina’s tragic death last year’s Harbourlife music festival, it’s been revealed that NSW Police have charged her best friend with supplying the fatal ecstasy pills.
It’s an unspeakably sad outcome for a young girl who is already living through the tremendous loss of her friend.
It is alleged that Rebecca Hannibal purchased a number of “purple speaker” pills from alleged drug dealer Matthew Forti. She then passed them onto Bartter who had a rare allergic reaction to the pills causing severe organ failure resulting in her death.
Rebecca will face charges in court on March 18th.
It’s an outcome that has many questioning the effectiveness of our drug laws and whether or not it’s fair to charge Hannibal with supplying the drug.
“We’re living in a time when even some of the most powerful people who run countries are saying that our criminal system around drug use and reform laws is failing”, says Matt Noffs, co-founder of Street University, an organisation that directly deals with youth drug use.
Top Comments
Basically, it is the user who pushes drugs onto their friends. If it wasn't for other users offering a line or a pill to a mate to 'try' then perhaps less people would use drugs. The big bad drug dealer is the one that everyone says we should go after but in actuality it's our mates who 'supply' drugs to the user. I don't believe that Georgina was a naive first time user and she is responsible for taking the drug herself. But perhaps people like her friend need to be dealt with by the law as we have for a long time preached harm minimisation for these people & yet it has not had any major impact. There are consequences for our actions. Georgina paid the ultimate consequence & now her friend has to face up to hers. It does not make her a bad person & if she gets the right barrister she will probably walk away from court with a section 10 bond without conviction.
Pills should be legal. They have been used successfully in therapy for social anxiety and also PTSD. I'm sure there are other benefits too. If they were legal and made from a reputable source, this girl might still be alive today. One life has already been destroyed by this, her friend should not be charged with supplying a drug. She could have known the dealer and arranged the purchase, and got her friend to pick up the drugs instead.
How many people die each week from cigarettes of alcohol? I bet cigarettes and alcohol kill more people in a month that illegal drugs do in an entire year.
Using that argument - how many more deaths per year do you think will result if more junk is legalised?
I'm saying the junk that is illegal causes less death than the junk that is legal. If more junk was legal, people could replace booze with pills or pot, and there would be less deaths per year.
Australia has a drinking problem which people are reluctant to talk about.