West Virginia Fighting a War Against Heroin Addiction, Overdose Deaths

  Editor’s Note: We are airing a four part series on West Virginia Public Radio, about the drug heroin and how it is affecting West Virginia. A recent Associated Press story reported the number of heroin deaths in the state have nearly doubled since 2010. In the first story, Ben Adducchio reports on why heroin is getting into the hands of so many people.

Since 2001, the number of deaths associated to heroin overdose have increased. According to statistics from the Health Statistics Center in the Department of Health and Human Resources, there were only 9 deaths in 2001, as compared to 67 in 2012.

Heroin is tan in color, and granular in texture, according to Carrie Ozalas in the West Virginia State Police Forensic Lab. She’s the section supervisor of the drug identification section, so any heroin taken to the lab is sent her way.

“It comes in a small quantity.  Heroin when we get it, it weighs point zero one grams. A sugar packet is one gram. So it weighs a tenth of that. It comes in packaging, a wax paper bag called a bindle. A very small paper bag,” she says.

“Sometimes it’s stamped with different marking. Something like 9 mm or Flintstones. Something that’s unique to the drug dealer, or the area where he’s coming from. We’ve seen them with all kinds of different things. Emblems for cars. Officers can tie those back to the areas where they initially came from.”

MORE THAN BEFORE

West Virginia’s heroin is coming here from Mexico, according to law enforcement officials. It reaches Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and then trickles into the state from those cities.

And it’s coming in like never before, Carrie Ozalas says.

“As far as heroin is concerned, I started in 2001 and in 2001 I rarely saw heroin. It was here, but it wasn’t here in a large amount. We saw more cocaine, cocaine base. That’s a lot of what we are seeing,” she said.

“Now we are starting to see the heroin. The heroin has kind of replaced the oxycodone, we are still seeing them but we are seeing them a lot less than we were two years ago. The heroin, we’re seeing, it’s just crazy, how much we’ve seen of it. I would say two thirds to three fourths of the cases we are receiving right now on a daily basis are either all heroin or has heroin mixed into it.”

WHY PEOPLE ARE HOOKED

Dr. Carl Sullivan is the director of addiction programs at West Virginia University. He says opioids like heroin and prescription drugs do a lot of different things to the body.

They provide pain relief, euphoria, which is what most people are looking for, they also cause constipation, they cause your eyeballs to constrict. They do a lot of things, they relieve anxiety,” Dr. Sullivan said.

Heroin is an opiod and it’s illegal but it wasn’t always that way. Dr. Sullivan says it was once legal to use heroin, and it was a substitute for morphine many years ago. Dr. Sullivan says heroin proved to be more addictive than morphine and doctors misjudged just how addictive it could be.

And not only is it addictive, Sullivan says it serves as a  substitute for pills when they aren’t available to people needing that fix.

OPIOID ADDICTION

Dr. Sullivan says 20 years ago, prescription opioids were given to patients seeking help for pain, at a fast rate. When people weren’t able to get the medicine they wanted, they turned to heroin.

“We have a large group of patients who have been exposed to opioids and they are dependent on opioids. What’s come into fill that gap as the number of prescriptions has gone down is heroin,” said Dr. Sullivan.

“Heroin is illegal, it is much cheaper to buy on the street than most prescription opioids were and heroin has met the demand for patients who can’t get the drugs.”

And heroin is being used all over the state. According to the data from the West Virginia Health Statistics Center, 59 of the state’s heroin overdose deaths since 2001 occurred in Berkeley County, in the Eastern Panhandle, while 41 occurred in Cabell, and 30 were from Monongalia. Then Kanawha, and Jefferson round out the top 5.

 

What is Synthetic Marijuana?

  Two businesses in Morgantown are accused of illegally selling a drug known as synthetic marijuana. Law enforcement leaders are working with United States Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld, II, to investigate but so far no charges have been filed.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and other sources, synthetic marijuana refers to herbs and plant materials that are sprayed with chemicals designed to mimic the effects of marijuana. It’s often marketed as incense and labeled “not for human consumption.” While not exclusively generated out of Asia, law officials indicate China may be a major source of production.

In July of 2012, the Synthetic Drug Abuse Prevention Act was signed into Federal law which banned synthetic compounds commonly found in the drug, placing them under Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act.

Schedule I drugs are considered the most dangerous of all drugs, which have no currently accepted medical uses and a high potential for abuse. Other schedule I drugs include heroine, LSD, and marijuana.

Since 2012, and since West Virginia passed a law banning the sale of the product around the same time, law officials say, there seems to have been a decrease in the drug’s prevalence.

But earlier this week a Chicago NBC affiliate reported that the O’Hare airport sees more smuggled synthetic marijuana than cocaine or ecstasy. 

Credit U.S. Attorney’s Office
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U.S. Attorney's Office

“It is unpredictably dangerous,” says U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld. He confirms that the designer drug is a growing concern elsewhere in the country, which makes him uneasy about it becoming a greater concern under his jurisdiction. 

Symptoms can include:

  • rapid heart rate
  • kidney failure
  • seizures
  • vomiting
  • agitation
  • confusion
  • hallucinations

Ihlenfeld says many deaths throughout the country have been tied directly to use of the synthetic cannabanoids. He explains, because the drugs are sold in shops, often falsely advertising that they contain “natural” psychoactive materials, users get a false sense of security. Ihlenfeld says as an illegal material, production of the drug is naturally highly unregulated. He say the drug is fabricated in ways that make predicting potency all but impossible.
Morgantown police report that the unpredictable drug presents challenges for medical professionals. Dr. Rolly Sullivan from West Virginia University’s Health Sciences Center says emergency room doctors have an especially difficult time since there is no standardized way of testing for the drug.

Meanwhile the Morgantown businesses known as Mid-Nite Adult and the X-Hale Hookah Lounge are accused of selling significant amounts of the synthetic cannabinoids commonly packaged and labeled as, “Spice‚” “Herbal Incense‚” or “K2.” Law officials suspect that in just under two years the businesses collectively generated over $4 million in sales.

Officials say undercover controlled purchases were made from both businesses and then the substances were submitted to the Drug Enforcement Agency’s Mid-Atlantic Laboratory for analysis. Ihlenfeld says his team is waiting for more lab results before they proceed with any criminal charges, and the investigation is ongoing.

Ex-Homeland Security Official Accused of Fraud in W.Va.

A Virginia man who is a former director of a Homeland Security division has been indicted on charges he used his government-issued credit card to obtain more than $100,000 in cash advances at the Hollywood Casino in Charles Town.
 
U.S. Attorney William Ihlenfeld announced Monday that 55-year-old Gene Protogiannis of Lovettsville, Va., has been indicted on 45 counts of wire fraud. He says Protogiannis used the government credit card to obtain $115,000 in cash advances in 2013.
 
The government says Protogiannis was the acting director of the Tactical Operations Division for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, a division of Homeland Security. He is scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court in Martinsburg on Wednesday.
 
Protogiannis’ federal public defender did not immediately return a telephone message left by The Associated Press.

Thirteen Charged in W.Va. Cocaine Ring Bust

More than a dozen people have been charged with participating in a cocaine trafficking ring in West Virginia.
 
Seven people from West Virginia, three from Florida and three from Maryland are charged in a 73-count indictment issued March 18 by a federal grand jury in Martinsburg.
 
U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II announced the indictment on Monday in Wheeling.
 
The charges include money laundering, conspiracy and distributing a controlled substance near a public college.
 
Ihlenfeld says the group brought cocaine and crack cocaine to Keyser from other parts of the country to sell.
 
If convicted, each defendant faces up to life in prison on the conspiracy charge.

The charges stem from an investigation by the Potomac Highlands Drug and Violent Crime Task Force.
 

W.Va. Inmate Charged with Threatening President

A West Virginia inmate faces federal charges of threatening President Barack Obama and his family. Robert Dale Tasker is charged in an indictment with…

A West Virginia inmate faces federal charges of threatening President Barack Obama and his family.
 
Robert Dale Tasker is charged in an indictment with three counts of threatening Obama and one count of threatening the president’s family. The alleged threats were mailed in December and February.
 
U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II says the 43-year-old Tasker is an inmate at the Tygart Valley Regional Jail in Belington.
 
If convicted on the federal charges, Tasker faces up to five years in prison on each count.
 
A federal grand jury in Clarksburg issued the indictment last week.
 

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