It's a stark warning for parents of teens or young adults, who may be into the rave or party scene.

For the second time in less than a month, a young woman has died as a result of a suspected drug overdose, and the common link appears to be ecstasy

On Friday night 17-year-old Jenni Bond planned to go to the movies with a friend.

 But her mother Renatta Bond says she ended up at a house party where her drink was spiked with a drug, possibly ecstasy.

The teen died on the steps of the Burnaby Edmonds Skytrain station, the spot where on Monday her mother remembered her only child.

"She was my best friend. We stuck together you know,'' Renatta said.

Burnaby RCMP, however, have another version of events. They say the death is not suspicious and the young woman knowingly took a drug.

Jenni is the second teen this month to die suddenly from a suspected drug overdose.

Police are still waiting for toxicology reports on 16-year-old Carla Benavides of West Vancouver.

She was found unconscious in her bed by her mother after attending a house party, where ecstasy was being consumed.

Police have this warning for young people who take the illegal drug.

"We don't know what type of ecstasy is being manufactured out there. We have no control over what is actually the cocktail mix of the ecstasy pill itself,'' said Staff Sgt. Dave Goddard of the RCMP Drug Enforcement Unit.

"Various organizations may mix their ecstasy with other drugs [which] obviously we or the public have no control over,'' he said.

Meanwhile, Renatta says she misses her daughter and hopes that other parents will talk to their children about the dangers of drugs such as ecstacy.

Police say it will take a toxicology test to determine exactly what kind of drug killed Jenni, and those results will likely take weeks.

With a report by CTV British Columbia's Jina You.