News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Deadly Heroin Has Likely Hit Area |
Title: | US PA: Deadly Heroin Has Likely Hit Area |
Published On: | 2006-07-09 |
Source: | Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 00:32:30 |
DEADLY HEROIN HAS LIKELY HIT AREA
County Coroner Says Pain Killer Fentanyl Mix Is Probably Cause Of
Luzerne Man's Death
WILKES-BARRE - Fentanyl is the new rat poison for heroin addicts.
Spicing up heroin with rat poison, strychnine or other chemicals has
long been a practice of dealers seeking to attract customers looking
for an even greater high. But sometimes the mix can be deadly -
especially if the cut is fentanyl.
Daniel Dominick, 27, died Friday at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital
after taking what was likely a fentanyl-heroin mix, according to
Luzerne County Coroner's Office. The Luzerne man's death placed
Wilkes-Barre on a growing list of cities where the deadly heroin
concoction has been circulating in recent months.
More than 70 people have died from fentanyl-laced heroin in the
Philadelphia area since April, and it's the same in other major
cities. Officials in Detroit have reported more than 80
fentanyl-related fatalities and Chicago has had 60, according to
respective law enforcement agencies.
In Pittsburgh, fentanyl-laced heroin is being sold on the street
under the name "get high or die tryin', " and an increasing
number of users are doing just that.
Just 125 micrograms is enough fentanyl to kill an adult - that's the
equivalent of five or six grains of salt. Law enforcement experts say
lacing heroin with the painkiller has only come in vogue this year,
especially in the past three months.
An undercover narcotics agent for the Philadelphia police said
addicts will seek out brands of heroin reputed to be the most potent,
and in recent months have been traveling to Philadelphia from all
over the state to get heroin laced with fentanyl.
"If there's an extra kick in it, they look for that brand," said the
agent, who declined to be identified for safety reasons. "They'll ask
for 'Dracula' or 'Nike' or another brand. The dealers know when it's
cut with fentanyl but they don't care; not all the customers know."
According to the agent, users from the Wilkes-Barre area have been
getting fentanyl-laced heroin from Hispanic communities on the East
side of Philadelphia. "They come from everywhere to get this stuff.
They'll get two or three bundles so they don't have to make the trip again."
Although heroin cut with fentanyl has been claiming lives in
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh since April, law enforcement officials
weren't sure if it had hit the streets of Wilkes-Barre until a string
of overdoses last week culminated in a death Friday. City police and
medics responded to approximately 15 drug overdoses last week,
including five Friday.
Luzerne County Coroner Dr. John Consalvo can't prove it was fentanyl
that killed Dominick until he gets back a toxicology test in a couple
weeks, but he suspects it was.
Fentanyl, some strains of which are hundreds of times more potent
than heroin, affects people differently when cut with other drugs. In
Friday's incident, Dominick shared a needle with another man, who
took a hit from the same batch of heroin, police said. That man,
whose name was not released, showed no signs of a negative reaction.
County Coroner Says Pain Killer Fentanyl Mix Is Probably Cause Of
Luzerne Man's Death
WILKES-BARRE - Fentanyl is the new rat poison for heroin addicts.
Spicing up heroin with rat poison, strychnine or other chemicals has
long been a practice of dealers seeking to attract customers looking
for an even greater high. But sometimes the mix can be deadly -
especially if the cut is fentanyl.
Daniel Dominick, 27, died Friday at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital
after taking what was likely a fentanyl-heroin mix, according to
Luzerne County Coroner's Office. The Luzerne man's death placed
Wilkes-Barre on a growing list of cities where the deadly heroin
concoction has been circulating in recent months.
More than 70 people have died from fentanyl-laced heroin in the
Philadelphia area since April, and it's the same in other major
cities. Officials in Detroit have reported more than 80
fentanyl-related fatalities and Chicago has had 60, according to
respective law enforcement agencies.
In Pittsburgh, fentanyl-laced heroin is being sold on the street
under the name "get high or die tryin', " and an increasing
number of users are doing just that.
Just 125 micrograms is enough fentanyl to kill an adult - that's the
equivalent of five or six grains of salt. Law enforcement experts say
lacing heroin with the painkiller has only come in vogue this year,
especially in the past three months.
An undercover narcotics agent for the Philadelphia police said
addicts will seek out brands of heroin reputed to be the most potent,
and in recent months have been traveling to Philadelphia from all
over the state to get heroin laced with fentanyl.
"If there's an extra kick in it, they look for that brand," said the
agent, who declined to be identified for safety reasons. "They'll ask
for 'Dracula' or 'Nike' or another brand. The dealers know when it's
cut with fentanyl but they don't care; not all the customers know."
According to the agent, users from the Wilkes-Barre area have been
getting fentanyl-laced heroin from Hispanic communities on the East
side of Philadelphia. "They come from everywhere to get this stuff.
They'll get two or three bundles so they don't have to make the trip again."
Although heroin cut with fentanyl has been claiming lives in
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh since April, law enforcement officials
weren't sure if it had hit the streets of Wilkes-Barre until a string
of overdoses last week culminated in a death Friday. City police and
medics responded to approximately 15 drug overdoses last week,
including five Friday.
Luzerne County Coroner Dr. John Consalvo can't prove it was fentanyl
that killed Dominick until he gets back a toxicology test in a couple
weeks, but he suspects it was.
Fentanyl, some strains of which are hundreds of times more potent
than heroin, affects people differently when cut with other drugs. In
Friday's incident, Dominick shared a needle with another man, who
took a hit from the same batch of heroin, police said. That man,
whose name was not released, showed no signs of a negative reaction.
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