News (Media Awareness Project) - US: The Drug War - 'The Best High They've Ever Had' |
Title: | US: The Drug War - 'The Best High They've Ever Had' |
Published On: | 2006-06-12 |
Source: | Newsweek (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 03:21:43 |
THE DRUG WAR - 'THE BEST HIGH THEY'VE EVER HAD'
Street users call it drop dead, executioner, flat-liner, the
exorcist, Al Capone, fefe, Teflon and diesel. Cops know it as a
deadly mix of heroin and fentanyl, an anesthetic and painkiller far
more potent than morphine. For cancer patients racked with pain,
legally prescribed fentanyl can be a godsend. But for junkies, the
fentanyl-heroin cocktail has become the hot new high, as lethal as it
is alluring. It is being blamed for hundreds of deaths this year in
big cities in the Midwest and Northeast. In Wayne County, Mich., home
to Detroit, there have been 50 deaths in just the past two weeks,
including 19 in one deadly day in May.
The problem is that cops don't know who is spreading the killer junk
on the streets. It might be just one big bad batch that's been widely
distributed, or it could be coming from multiple sources, say
law-enforcement officials, who first began noticing a spike in
fentanyl-heroin overdoses in November. One promising new lead came
from the arrest of five people at an underground fentanyl lab in
Mexico. "We're working to see if there's a connection, if that lab
was the source," says DEA spokeswoman Rogene Waite. Federal and local
police are meeting in Chicago this month to compare notes and come up
with a cohesive strategy to combat the growing crisis.
Dealers are not intentionally killing their customers. Instead, it
appears that in their zeal to get the new product on the street,
dealers haven't perfected the recipe. Users say the blend, when
snorted, injected or smoked, gives them an instant feeling of extreme
euphoria. After 11 people died from the drug in one day in Chicago
last month, police issued a public warning. Instead of being scared
off, "people flocked to the area looking for the drug," says police
spokeswoman Monique Bond. "They say," says Frank Limon, a top Chicago
cop, "that it's the best high they've ever had." And the deadliest.
Street users call it drop dead, executioner, flat-liner, the
exorcist, Al Capone, fefe, Teflon and diesel. Cops know it as a
deadly mix of heroin and fentanyl, an anesthetic and painkiller far
more potent than morphine. For cancer patients racked with pain,
legally prescribed fentanyl can be a godsend. But for junkies, the
fentanyl-heroin cocktail has become the hot new high, as lethal as it
is alluring. It is being blamed for hundreds of deaths this year in
big cities in the Midwest and Northeast. In Wayne County, Mich., home
to Detroit, there have been 50 deaths in just the past two weeks,
including 19 in one deadly day in May.
The problem is that cops don't know who is spreading the killer junk
on the streets. It might be just one big bad batch that's been widely
distributed, or it could be coming from multiple sources, say
law-enforcement officials, who first began noticing a spike in
fentanyl-heroin overdoses in November. One promising new lead came
from the arrest of five people at an underground fentanyl lab in
Mexico. "We're working to see if there's a connection, if that lab
was the source," says DEA spokeswoman Rogene Waite. Federal and local
police are meeting in Chicago this month to compare notes and come up
with a cohesive strategy to combat the growing crisis.
Dealers are not intentionally killing their customers. Instead, it
appears that in their zeal to get the new product on the street,
dealers haven't perfected the recipe. Users say the blend, when
snorted, injected or smoked, gives them an instant feeling of extreme
euphoria. After 11 people died from the drug in one day in Chicago
last month, police issued a public warning. Instead of being scared
off, "people flocked to the area looking for the drug," says police
spokeswoman Monique Bond. "They say," says Frank Limon, a top Chicago
cop, "that it's the best high they've ever had." And the deadliest.
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