Cabell County Overdose Death Toll Rises

Seventy people in Cabell County died in 2015 of drug overdoses.

WSAZ-TV reports that the numbers were tallied by the city of Huntington’s Office of Drug Control Policy. The office found that there were more than 900 drug overdoses last year in Huntington and Cabell County.

The number of reported drug overdoses in 2015 was greater than the total number of ODs from 2012 to 2014.

In recent years, West Virginia has ranked near the top or at the top among states in terms of overdose deaths in the U.S.

Former WVSU Basketball Player Sentenced on Heroin Charges

Former West Virginia State University basketball player Kendrick Leon Ward will spend two years in prison for distributing heroin.

U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin says Ward sold heroin to a confidential informant near a dormitory on West Virginia State’s campus in Institute in 2013. The 25-year-old Oak Park, Michigan, resident pleaded guilty in September to distributing heroin within 1,000 feet of school property.

Goodwin says in a news release that Ward was sentenced on Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Charleston.

Ward played in 27 games during the 2012-2013 season and averaged 4.5 points per game.
 

Drug Overdoses Claiming West Virginia's Youth

West Virginia has the highest rate of youth drug overdose deaths in the country, according to a new national report.

The study, produced by the non-profit Trust for America’s Health, found that nationwide, youth drug overdose deaths have more than doubled among people aged 12-25.

In a third of states, among them West Virginia, rates have tripled or quadrupled. The increase in deaths is most pronounced among young adults (defined as ages 19-25).

Current rates are highest in West Virginia, at 12.56 per 100,000 youths. That’s almost double the national average and about five about times higher than the lowest rate of 2.2 per 100,000, recorded in North Dakota.

“The rates in West Virginia are probably higher because there is a higher level of prescribing – greater use of opioids for pain control,” said Jeffrey Levi, executive director for the Trust for America’s Health, and one of the study’s authors.

Opioids include the painkillers oxycodone, methadone, and hydrocodone. 

In 2013, prescription painkillers were responsible for more than half of all drug overdose-related deaths, according to the report.

“Unfortunately, a lot of the overdose deaths are not just from the use of the pills, but also as people become addicted  and as the pills become too expensive people transition to heroin,” said Levi. “And the heroin that’s available now in this county at this stage in our epidemic is purer, more concentrated and therefore, more potentially dangerous.”

Levi said combating youth overdose death begins with prevention rather than intervention; more than 90 percent of adults with substance abuse disorders begin abusing before the age of 18. 

As part of the study, Levi’s team looked at ten policies that have been proven to prevent or reduce substance misuse.

Examples include programs to prevent bullying, smoking, underage alcohol sales and funding for mental health services.  

The policies were gathered into a “Substance Misuse Prevention Report Card” and each state received a grade on how many of the ten resources they provided their constituents. West Virginia’s grade was four out of ten.

“The major emphasis of the study is that there are things we can do that will prevent kids from misusing these drugs in the first place, said Levi. “And that’s so critically important for us to address as a country.”

This story was amended on 11/25/2015 to reflect the fact that West Virginia has the highest rate of youth overdose deaths in the U.S. It originally said the state has the highest number of youth overdose deaths.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Key Heroin Distribution Figure Admits to Role in Ring

A 27-year-old Windsor, Maryland, man faces up to 20 years in prison for his leading role in a heroin trafficking ring that distributed the drug in West Virginia, Virginia and elsewhere.

The government says Brian Alexander Hall entered a guilty plea to a conspiracy count Thursday in federal court in Martinsburg. Besides a prison term, he also could be fined up to $1 million.

Federal prosecutors say Hall “orchestrated” the multi-state heroin distribution network. The government says it hobbled the illegal enterprise in June with the arrest of 41 people.

Hall’s sentencing hasn’t been scheduled.

Gov. Tomblin Says W.Va. Has Options to Combat Substance Abuse

Two weeks after President Obama’s visit to West Virginia, aimed at putting the spotlight on substance abuse issues across the country, the state’s leaders are still talking about ways to combat the issue.

At a forum in Martinsburg, Governor Tomblin met with those struggling with the disease and others trying to provide assistance in the Eastern Panhandle.

While treating addiction is still a major issue,  law enforcement officials in the area still want the governor to know that drug trafficking is a major problem.

More than 150 people came out for Governor Tomblin’s Substance Abuse Summit at the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Department. The event provided a comprehensive review of the state’s efforts to combat substance abuse problems.

Nearly twenty presenters shared information and stories about how they’re working to help addicts get and stay clean. Tomblin says the presentations alone prove the state is improving when it comes to access to treatment.

“We’ve come a long way in the last five years as you can see from the services listed on the charts today,” Tomblin noted, “We’ve got the call line now, we’ve never had before, where people that’s wanting help, that’s needing help have a place to call where they can get professional help they need to get into programs.”

That call line is the state’s new 24 hour hotline for substance abuse help. Launched in September, Tomblin says so far more than 350 West Virginians have used it to find substance abuse treatment services.

And there are other initiatives to aid in the fight against substance abuse, too.

From expanding out-patient treatment options, to random drug testing in the workplace, to possible legislation – many accomplishments and new ideas were brought to the conversation.

But in the Eastern Panhandle, where the forum was held, there’s a lack of access to treatment facilities and other drug abuse services. It’s something Tomblin says is a challenge not just for West Virginia, but the entire country.

“I am frustrated, you know, we’ve got a great state, we’ve got great people, and to have this plague is something that we don’t need,” Tomblin explained, “and of course it’s not only West Virginia, it’s across the country. I’ve talked with other governors; we’re all facing the same thing, and you know, we’ve all got to work together, we’ve got to get the services people need to get off drugs, we got to have programs to keep them from getting on drugs to start with.”

But in the eyes of law enforcement officials, drug trafficking is still the main issue in the Eastern Panhandle.

Because of the nearness to major cities on the east coast, like Baltimore, heroin trafficking has become a major problem for cities like Martinsburg.

Berkeley County Sheriff Kenny Lemaster says he wants to make sure state officials don’t lose sight of the trafficking problem and ways to fix it. Still, he says he was pleased with the outcome of the governor’s drug summit.

“I think there’s still a lot of things still being worked on, and a lot of things that will still continue to evolve from this,” Lemaster said, “As drugs do, they evolve in different ways to create problems for our community and our state, and I think that we’re gonna have to be able to keep an open mind and continue to work through the spin-offs from what’s going on.”

Lemaster says he thinks educating young people about the dangers of drugs early on is one of the best ways in combatting substance abuse.

Substance Abuse Help Hotline: 1-844-HELP4WV

Gov. Tomblin to Hold Substance Abuse Summit in Martinsburg

With President Obama’s visit to Charleston just two short weeks ago, people and organizations across the state have responded to the President’s call to fight drugs and overdose deaths in West Virginia.

On Wednesday, Governor Tomblin continues this fight and travels to Martinsburg to host a summit with law enforcement and the community on substance abuse in the area.

Back in April, Senator Shelley Moore Capito visited Martinsburg to host a Drug Prevention Summit. During her visit, much of the community expressed concern about Berkeley County’s lack of treatment facilities and the rate at which heroin is trafficked throughout the county.

Berkeley County holds the number two spot for most heroin overdose deaths in the state, following Cabell County.

Now, Governor Earl Ray Tomblin visits Martinsburg to host his own summit on substance abuse and plans to take a comprehensive look at the state’s efforts to combat this problem in the Eastern Panhandle.

Berkeley County Sheriff Kenny Lemaster says he hopes the governor will bring new ideas to the table.

“There are things we can start doing with education; educating, you know within out school systems about the drugs, educating programs outside the school system, trying to help set up addiction facilities, and then also give us the resources to combat this, and you know allow the police to continue their fight to curb the continuous stream of drugs into our state,” Lemaster said.

Governor Tomblin’s Substance Abuse Summit will be held at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, November 4 at the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Department in Martinsburg.

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