News (Media Awareness Project) - US KY: Series: A Familiar Story - From Miner To Drug User To |
Title: | US KY: Series: A Familiar Story - From Miner To Drug User To |
Published On: | 2003-12-07 |
Source: | Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 03:55:51 |
A FAMILIAR STORY: FROM MINER TO DRUG USER TO DEALER
Harlan County Sheriff Steve Duff has heard stories like those of John and
David Perkins plenty of times: A coal miner gets hurt and turns to dealing
for some extra cash.
First it was bootlegging alcohol, Duff said. Then came marijuana. And the
number of dealers -- former coal miners and a lot of other people -- has
only increased during recent years with the rush of the painkiller
OxyContin, Duff said.
"They'll do it to supplement their income," he said. If a dealer gets his
hands on a bottle of 60 OxyContin pills, 40 milligrams each, he can take in
more than $3,000, Duff said.
A 2002 report by an agency of the U.S. Department of Justice said pill
addiction in Eastern Kentucky has roots in local industry.
"In the past, coal miners spent hours each day crouched in narrow mine
shafts," the report said. "Pain-killers were dispensed by coal mine camp
doctors in an attempt to keep the miners working. Self-medicating became a
way of life for miners, and this practice often led to abuse and addiction
among individuals who would have been disinclined to abuse traditional
illicit drugs."
These days, the profit motive to sell OxyContin is huge, Duff said.
In places such as Harlan and McCreary counties, a lot of people could use
the money. When David Perkins was a toddler in 1969, 42.2 percent of
Harlan's population lived below the poverty line.
Those U.S. Census numbers have improved, but in 1999 they were still far
higher than the national rate of 12.4 percent. For Harlan, the figure was
32.5 percent. In McCreary County, it was 32.2 percent.
Harlan County Sheriff Steve Duff has heard stories like those of John and
David Perkins plenty of times: A coal miner gets hurt and turns to dealing
for some extra cash.
First it was bootlegging alcohol, Duff said. Then came marijuana. And the
number of dealers -- former coal miners and a lot of other people -- has
only increased during recent years with the rush of the painkiller
OxyContin, Duff said.
"They'll do it to supplement their income," he said. If a dealer gets his
hands on a bottle of 60 OxyContin pills, 40 milligrams each, he can take in
more than $3,000, Duff said.
A 2002 report by an agency of the U.S. Department of Justice said pill
addiction in Eastern Kentucky has roots in local industry.
"In the past, coal miners spent hours each day crouched in narrow mine
shafts," the report said. "Pain-killers were dispensed by coal mine camp
doctors in an attempt to keep the miners working. Self-medicating became a
way of life for miners, and this practice often led to abuse and addiction
among individuals who would have been disinclined to abuse traditional
illicit drugs."
These days, the profit motive to sell OxyContin is huge, Duff said.
In places such as Harlan and McCreary counties, a lot of people could use
the money. When David Perkins was a toddler in 1969, 42.2 percent of
Harlan's population lived below the poverty line.
Those U.S. Census numbers have improved, but in 1999 they were still far
higher than the national rate of 12.4 percent. For Harlan, the figure was
32.5 percent. In McCreary County, it was 32.2 percent.
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