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News (Media Awareness Project) - US DE: Editorial: Tainted Drugs Led To Creative Approach In US
Title:US DE: Editorial: Tainted Drugs Led To Creative Approach In US
Published On:2006-09-18
Source:News Journal (DE)
Fetched On:2008-08-18 00:28:57
TAINTED DRUGS LED TO CREATIVE APPROACH IN US ATTORNEY'S CHARGES

The message that U.S. Attorney Colm Connolly sent on Thursday to
dealers of deadly fentanyl-laced heroin was needed.

They face mandatory federal jail time -- from 20 years to as much as
life in prison -- when their tainted batches of dope kill or
seriously harm buyers.

This is the first time in Delaware that prosecutors have invoked a
federal law with no regard for a criminal's intent. It's a tough call
needed for tough times in drug enforcement.

Across the country, at least 300 deaths, and hundreds more non-fatal
overdoses, have been blamed on fentanyl-laced heroin just this year.

Since April, more than 30 heroin overdoses have been reported in
Delaware, including nine known deaths.

A Dover man was among those deaths. He allegedly purchased the
tainted heroin from Joseph Bentley, a suspected New Castle-area drug dealer.

Three days after the user's death, wiretaps of phone conversations
between Bentley and his father, a Delaware Correctional Center
inmate, recorded the son learning that his batches were tainted. He
also said a second person died, but gave no name.

But even this news did not stop Joseph Bentley from selling his bad
batches; that is until his May 5 arrest, police say.

Mr. Connolly's use of this law is meant to address this kind of
egregious disregard for life.

Tainted drugs are not likely to go away. A criminally minded genius
keeps them fueling the illegal drug trade around the world.
Consequently, law enforcement authorities must be equally imaginative
and creative within the bounds of the law.

Critics worried about the de-emphasis on dealers' intent should weigh
that concern against the consequences of a dealer's lack of regard
for their victims' lives.
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