Law Enforcement Unveils Drug Prevention Testing in Ohio County

Federal law enforcement officials have unveiled a drug prevention initiative in Ohio County.

U.S. Attorney William Ihlenfeld II said Tuesday that drug testing kits will be made available for free to Ohio County residents.

Results from the saliva-based drug tests are available within 20 minutes. The test screens for a variety of substances including marijuana, opioid painkillers, stimulants, tranquilizers, cocaine, methadone, and PCP. The kits also contain a stamped envelope to voluntarily report test results. No personal information is collected.

The kits are provided through a partnership with the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program. They will be distributed at nine locations in the county, including at the Board of Education office and Wheeling Park High School. 

New Plan Targets Drug Abuse in North-Central W.Va.

Prevention and increased access to treatment are components of a new plan targeting drug abuse in north-central West Virginia.

U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II said Thursday that the plan was developed by a working group of community leaders in the region. It’s similar to an existing plan in the Northern Panhandle.

The plan also includes implementation of a pilot program to increase the availability of opioid antagonists to law enforcement officers in the region. The medications can save people who have overdosed on heroin, prescription drugs or other opioids.

Other components include drug-free activities for youth, a syringe exchange program and educating the community about available recovery resources in the region.

Addiction Action Plan Launched in North-Central W.Va.

U.S. District Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld, II, just announced the launch of an organized effort to combat addiction problems in Marion, Monongalia and Harrison counties: an Addiction Action Plan. It’s an extension of an initiative that began in the Northern Panhandle late last year in response to a resurgence of heroin use in the region.

“We have partnered with thought-leaders in a lot of different areas to try to come up with a multidiscipline approach to this,” Ihlenfeld said.

Ihlenfeld’s office is collaborating with judges, lawmakers, education officials, health care practitioners, members of the media, and business leaders to tackle the region’s raging drug problems.

The Scene of the Overdose

He says one big change that’s come of the collaboration is how an overdose scene is handled.

“Just within the past couple years, an overdose scene was treated as a medical incident. An ambulance was called and the person taken away.”

That’s not the case anymore. Now a member of a drug task force is called to the scene to conduct an investigation. Cellphones and drug paraphernalia are collected as well as needles for analysis and anything else that can help definitively determine the cause of death, down to the substance, and where that substance came from.

And laws have changed. Now, if someone dies because of a drug you helped supply…  

“…the penalties are significant,” Ihlenfeld said. “It’s 20 years to life if you deliver a drug that causes somebody else to die.”

Assisting the Addicted

But the Addiction Action Plan isn’t just about identifying and practicing more sophisticated and targeted prosecution.

“We recognized years ago that while it’s important to prosecute and investigate and incarcerate the drug traffickers, we need to do more with the users to try and decrease the demand for this product.”

Ihlenfeld’s office has been advocating for more treatment facilities and more ways of reaching out to community members who might be struggling.

“We have started in the Northern Panhandle by putting together and launching a website called drugfreeov.com. It’s a one-stop-shop to find anything that might be available where they live either for themselves or for anybody that they might know. ”

Recommendations for the Addiction Action Plan committees in north-central West Virginia include adopting similar online resources.

Prevention

The plan also focuses on prevention efforts, largely by organizing presentations in schools.

“The feedback we get is always the greatest at the youngest age, 10 and 11,” Ihlenfeld said of the school visits he’s had so far. “They aren’t afraid to ask questions in front of their peers.”

Ihlenfeld believes it’s important to talk with kids as soon as they are able to comprehend concepts like heroin and drugs, addiction, and pitfalls in life that can lead to these dangerous scenarios.

Corporate Cooperation

Ihlenfeld is also focused on economic issues. Businesses have a hard time, he says, finding applicants in a workforce marred with drug addiction. Meetings are underway with business owners. Ihlenfeld says it behooves all parties to actively be a part of the solution and for business owners, that means considering all applicants — even those who battle addiction problems.

“A lot of these folks do want to work, they want to get their lives back on track,” Ihlenfeld said.

He says it’s not only an investment in the community but also in the future of the community, like one business owner in Indianapolis who hires felons almost exclusively.

“Hundreds of thousands of dollars every year go towards child support because they’re earning a wage, he’s withholding, by court order. If you don’t care about the convicted felon, think about the children and what you’re doing for them. Hopefully that child won’t repeat the mistakes made by father or mother because he has the support he needs.”

Collaborations are also underway with building and construction unions. Officials from Ihlenfeld’s office in Wheeling report that very productive meetings and meaningful steps are being taken in the Northern Panhandle as the result of these collaborations. Similar initiatives have been recommended for the action plan in north-central West Virginia.

A full report, including recommendations and potential outlines for the action plan in Marion, Monongalia and Harrison counties are set to be made public this week. Plans are in place to meet again in several months to discuss progress in the region and to extend an action plan into the Eastern Panhandle.

Wheeling Jesuit to Pay $2.3 Million to End Grant Probe

Wheeling Jesuit University has agreed to pay $2.3 million to the federal government to settle claims that it misused grant funding.

U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II announced the settlement Monday. He said the agreement ends an investigation into allegations that the university misused funds from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the U.S. Department of Labor and the National Science Foundation from 2003 to 2010. A NASA audit led to the allegations.

Ihlenfeld said settlement does not preclude criminal charges.

The university said in a statement that it operated in good faith in dealing with “highly complex and divergent” regulations. Wheeling Jesuit said the settlement will be paid with operating funds and will not affect other federally funded programs at the university.

 

Four Charged in Contract Scheme

  Four people have been charged with fraudulently using federal small-business programs to obtain contracts worth millions from the government.

U.S. Attorney William Ihlenfeld II said Monday that the defendants obtained contracts worth more than $140 million under a program that helps disadvantaged business operators compete for government contracts. Another $24 million was obtained under a program that helps disabled veterans.

A federal indictment charges 64-year-old Michael J. Marshall, 61-year-old Brandt Stover and 52-year-old Stephen M. Powell, all of Steubenville, Ohio, and 42-year-old Nichole P. Northcraft of New Cumberland, West Virginia, with conspiracy to defraud the United States and wire fraud.

Stover also is charged with willfully causing the submission of false claims and witness tampering.

 

Human Trafficking Forum Highlights a Growing Problem

Human trafficking (labor and sex) is becoming more and more of a problem in West Virginia according to law enforcement officials. A forum to educate communities throughout the state is ongoing, and legislation to improve state laws was also just introduced (HB 2161).

A third forum will be held at 6 p.m. this evening at WVU Parkersburg, featuring U-S Attorney for the Southern District of West Virginia, Booth Goodwin.

A Growing Problem

U.S. District Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II was among panelists who recently met in Morgantown. He said human trafficking deserves everyone’s attention. It might not seem likely in the small state of West Virginia but Ihlenfeld said human trafficking is a growing problem in our region just as it is across the country.

“What we’re seeing are handlers based in other parts of the country who come through West Virginia, through our truck stops, hotels and other parts of this state,” Ihlenfeld said.

Ihlenfeld also said:

  1. Many drug-traffickers look to increase profits by expanding into human trafficking.
  2. In the northern gas fields, the increase in transient workers often means increased demand for prostitution.

Spotting Victims

It’s not only foreign nationals who are caught up in the trade — Ihlenfeld said that’s a common misconception. Runaways and homeless kids often find themselves trapped in different parts of the country having been promised work, drugs, or love, Ihlenfeld said.

While law enforcement does plan and execute trafficking stings through the internet sites that harbor illegal interactions, eyes in communities are also critical to help their efforts. Signs to notice might include:

  • Someone who is malnourished, or in poor health
  • Someone who won’t look you in the eye, or is highly anxious
  • Someone seems unable to make decisions for themselves
  • Someone completely reliant on someone else
  • Someone who says they are visiting, but doesn’t know where they are

Ihlenfeld said when one or more of these kinds of observations start knocking at your gut, it’s time to call it in to the national 24/7 human trafficking hotline: 1-888-3737-888.

Before calling, it’s important to note as many details as you can:

  • descriptions of possible victims or perpetrators
  • license plate numbers
  • location
  • suspicious behavior

The series of discussions was initiated by the Sisters of Saint Joseph. Fighting human trafficking is a cause the Wheeling-based Catholic religious community is dedicated to.

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