News (Media Awareness Project) - US OH: Fentanyl-Laced Drugs Turn Up On Ohio's Streets, Too |
Title: | US OH: Fentanyl-Laced Drugs Turn Up On Ohio's Streets, Too |
Published On: | 2006-06-17 |
Source: | Detroit Free Press (MI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 02:19:16 |
FENTANYL-LACED DRUGS TURN UP ON OHIO'S STREETS, TOO
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Police in Columbus, Dayton and Mansfield have found
a painkiller-laced heroin that has killed addicts in Detroit, Chicago
and Philadelphia.
Fentanyl turned up in six of 10 batches of heroin confiscated by
Mansfield police, said police laboratory director Anthony Tambasco.
The lab started testing for the drug just before Memorial Day, after
officials heard of numerous recent deaths in the Detroit area, he said.
About a half-dozen deaths related to fentanyl-laced heroin in
Montgomery County have been found since the beginning of the year,
said Ken Betz, director of the county coroner's office in Dayton.
"We had them where they chew it. We've had them where they shot it
up," Betz said. "What they're seeing nationally, we're seeing locally."
The Detroit area is the apparent hub of the problem, with more than
100 confirmed cases since last fall, but Columbus police have
discovered at least three cases of heroin mixed with fentanyl in the
past month, crime lab manager Jami St. Clair said.
Fentanyl, commonly used to treat cancer pain, can be up to 50 times
stronger than heroin, said Columbus Police Sgt. Steve Overholser.
The drug can be lethal just on its own and matching it with heroin
makes it even deadlier, said Mansfield Police Sgt. Mike Bammann.
In Chicago, there have been more than 60 confirmed fentanyl overdoses
since April 2005, with the vast majority of them coming this year,
the Drug Enforcement Administration said. Deaths caused by
fentanyl-laced drugs have also been reported in Missouri, New Jersey,
Delaware and Maryland.
Bammann said undercover police are trying to pinpoint who is
supplying the bad heroin to dealers in and around Mansfield, about 65
miles northeast of Columbus.
In Mansfield, Paul Jones, the Richland County coroner, said his
office is rechecking recent overdose deaths to see if any were
related to fentanyl-laced heroin. Addicts will probably not be scared
straight by warnings, he said.
"People don't care what they put in their veins. Unfortunately, there
will be some who will probably die," he said.
The DEA says heroin distribution is increasing in Ohio, with the drug
being shipped directly from Chicago, Detroit, New York and the Mexican border.
A recent case involving fentanyl was traced from Pittsburgh to a lab
in Mexico, Tambasco said.
Fentanyl abuse first surfaced in Ohio in 2003, said Eric
Wandersleben, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug
Addiction Services. But mixing fentanyl and heroin has not been common, he said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Police in Columbus, Dayton and Mansfield have found
a painkiller-laced heroin that has killed addicts in Detroit, Chicago
and Philadelphia.
Fentanyl turned up in six of 10 batches of heroin confiscated by
Mansfield police, said police laboratory director Anthony Tambasco.
The lab started testing for the drug just before Memorial Day, after
officials heard of numerous recent deaths in the Detroit area, he said.
About a half-dozen deaths related to fentanyl-laced heroin in
Montgomery County have been found since the beginning of the year,
said Ken Betz, director of the county coroner's office in Dayton.
"We had them where they chew it. We've had them where they shot it
up," Betz said. "What they're seeing nationally, we're seeing locally."
The Detroit area is the apparent hub of the problem, with more than
100 confirmed cases since last fall, but Columbus police have
discovered at least three cases of heroin mixed with fentanyl in the
past month, crime lab manager Jami St. Clair said.
Fentanyl, commonly used to treat cancer pain, can be up to 50 times
stronger than heroin, said Columbus Police Sgt. Steve Overholser.
The drug can be lethal just on its own and matching it with heroin
makes it even deadlier, said Mansfield Police Sgt. Mike Bammann.
In Chicago, there have been more than 60 confirmed fentanyl overdoses
since April 2005, with the vast majority of them coming this year,
the Drug Enforcement Administration said. Deaths caused by
fentanyl-laced drugs have also been reported in Missouri, New Jersey,
Delaware and Maryland.
Bammann said undercover police are trying to pinpoint who is
supplying the bad heroin to dealers in and around Mansfield, about 65
miles northeast of Columbus.
In Mansfield, Paul Jones, the Richland County coroner, said his
office is rechecking recent overdose deaths to see if any were
related to fentanyl-laced heroin. Addicts will probably not be scared
straight by warnings, he said.
"People don't care what they put in their veins. Unfortunately, there
will be some who will probably die," he said.
The DEA says heroin distribution is increasing in Ohio, with the drug
being shipped directly from Chicago, Detroit, New York and the Mexican border.
A recent case involving fentanyl was traced from Pittsburgh to a lab
in Mexico, Tambasco said.
Fentanyl abuse first surfaced in Ohio in 2003, said Eric
Wandersleben, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug
Addiction Services. But mixing fentanyl and heroin has not been common, he said.
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