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Tag: fentanyl

  • Sacramento deputies arrest two after finding quarter-pound of fentanyl, guns

    Sacramento deputies arrest two after finding quarter-pound of fentanyl, guns

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    (FOX40.COM) — Two people were arrested on Wednesday after Sacramento County deputies found a quarter-pound of fentanyl, multiple scales, a sawed-off shotgun, and a loaded revolver.

    According to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office, the man and woman were also discovered to have felony warrants out of Placer County and were booked into a Sacramento County jail.
    Video Above: Sentence handed down in Placer County fentanyl-related death

    On Wednesday, deputies said two people gave them fake identities after contacting them during a “call for service.”

    Two people were arrested on Wednesday and were found to have multiple drugs, drug paraphernalia, and guns in their possession. (Credit: Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office)

    “Upon further investigation, a records check revealed that both the man and woman had felony warrants out of Placer County,” the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said.

    Deputies later searched a motor home belonging to the two people where they found the guns and fentanyl.

    The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office also posted a photo to social media that shows multiple phones, cash, and drug paraphernalia that seemed to indicate the intention of selling the fentanyl. All items were seized by deputies along with the guns and fentanyl.

    According to the California Department of Public Health, fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that can be up to 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine.

    The state department adds that fentanyl-laced drugs are “extremely dangerous” because it is nearly impossible to tell if other drugs have been laced with the substance and can’t be detected through sight, smell, or taste.

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    Aydian Ahmad

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  • Northern California fentanyl dealer convicted of murder receives 15-year sentence

    Northern California fentanyl dealer convicted of murder receives 15-year sentence

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    (FOX40.COM) — The Placer County Sheriff’s Office said on Thursday that the second fentanyl-related murder sentence in California has officially been delivered to a man who was found responsible for giving the lethal drug to a young woman in August 2022.

    “Arron Dare was sentenced to 15 years in prison for selling fentanyl to Haleigh Yarbrough, which ultimately resulted in her death,” the agency said on Facebook. “This is just another example of Placer County’s commitment to battling the fentanyl crisis.”

    On Dec. 6, Dare, 24, was convicted of second-degree murder for what law enforcement called, “the local fentanyl death” of a young woman. That woman was later identified as 25-year-old Haleigh Yarbrough from Auburn.

    The ruling comes about six months after Placer County handed down California’s first fentanyl-related murder sentencing on Oct. 10 to 20-year-old Nathaniel Cabacungan.

    Placer County has previously stated that it plans to “aggressively prosecute” fentanyl-related deaths in its attempt to fight the opioid crisis in Northern California.

    The county’s website states, “Fentanyl is the no. 1 killer of people between the ages of 18-45, surpassing car accidents and suicides.”

    Placer County adds that the area saw a 450% increase in fentanyl deaths from 2019-2021. Since 2021, the county has filed five criminal complaints against fentanyl dealers.

    • 22-year-old Virgil Bordner was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and is serving a 17-year sentence
    • 20-year-old Carson David Schewe has been charged with murder and possession of a controlled substance for sale (the first time a defendant in Placer County has been charged with murder for a fentanyl-related death)
    • 42-year-old Brandon Garner has had murder charges filed against him by the Placer County District Attorney’s Office

    “Selling fentanyl, if it results in a death, may result in a murder charge in our county. We have a simple message to dealers and distributors in our region – Placer County is NOT open for their business,” the DA’s office said.

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    Aydian Ahmad

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  • Two Oakland residents from Honduras sentenced for selling fentanyl, meth

    Two Oakland residents from Honduras sentenced for selling fentanyl, meth

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    Two Oakland residents originally from Honduras were handed multiyear prison sentences on Friday for selling fentanyl and methamphetamines in the San Francisco Tenderloin and other parts of the Bay Area, according to a Department of Justice news release published Friday.

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    Scooty Nickerson

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  • 10-year-old recipient of ‘Kindness Award’ dies, loved ones say. Now, uncle is charged

    10-year-old recipient of ‘Kindness Award’ dies, loved ones say. Now, uncle is charged

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    The South Carolina fourth grader was known for spending time with her Labrador retriever.

    The South Carolina fourth grader was known for spending time with her Labrador retriever.

    Screengrab from the Mackey Funerals and Cremations at Century Drive website

    Ivy Rayne Stowe was “full of life and love,” so it didn’t come as a surprise when the 10-year-old won a “Terrific Kid Award” at her South Carolina school, loved ones said.

    But days before she was set to receive the award, her life was cut short. On Jan. 12, Ivy was rushed to a hospital and died from the “combined toxic effects of fentanyl and xylazine,” a drug used as an animal tranquilizer and sometimes called Tranq.

    Now, months after the girl’s death, the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office said it made an arrest. The girl’s uncle, 25-year-old Zachary Taylor Mcclure, is charged with homicide by child abuse as deputies accuse him of bringing drugs into the home where he and his niece lived.

    Deputies didn’t list attorney information for Mcclure in a March 28 news release.

    “Investigators discovered Mcclure had been using fentanyl within the residence while in the child’s presence,” the sheriff’s office wrote. “Investigators believed the availability of the drug within the home contributed to the child’s death.”

    Deputies reportedly started looking into Ivy’s death after being called to a report of an unresponsive child early Jan. 12. The girl went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at a hospital, the Greenville County Coroner’s Office wrote in a news release.

    In a warrant, deputies said Mcclure knowingly committed “child abuse or neglect by bringing narcotics into the residence,” causing the 10-year-old to die from the combination of drugs. He was arrested and taken to jail.

    Meanwhile, Ivy is remembered as a fourth grader who attended Taylors Elementary School, near Greenville. She was an “energetic participant in karate” and often was found near her Labrador retriever, according to a post on the Mackey Funerals and Cremations at Century Drive website.

    “Ivy was full of life and love for her family and classmates. She received the ‘Kindness Award’ at Taylors Elementary for the loving kindness she showered on her classmates and everyone she met,” loved ones wrote in her online obituary, adding that she also was slated to be a recipient of the “Terrific Kid Award.”

    The US opioid crisis

    Overdoses are a leading cause of injury-related death in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    In 2021, there were more than 51,000 overdose deaths in the country, according to CDC data. In the past 21 years, drug overdoses have killed more than 932,000 people, the CDC reported.

    “The majority of overdose deaths involve opioids. Deaths involving synthetic opioids (largely illicitly made fentanyl) and stimulants (such as cocaine and methamphetamine) have increased in recent years,” the CDC said. “For every drug overdose that results in death, there are many more nonfatal overdoses, each one with its own emotional and economic toll.”

    Millions of people in the U.S. have an opioid addiction, according to the CDC. Addiction is a “chronic and relapsing disease that can affect anyone.”

    Simone Jasper is a reporter covering breaking stories for The News & Observer and real-time news in the Carolinas.

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    Simone Jasper

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  • St. Paul woman has been sentenced to 36 months for fentanyl death of 7-year-old daughter

    St. Paul woman has been sentenced to 36 months for fentanyl death of 7-year-old daughter

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    Morning headlines from March 22, 2024


    Morning headlines from March 22, 2024

    02:22

    ST. PAUL, Minn. — Shauntaija Jannell Travis was sentenced Friday to 36 months, with credit for 292 days served for the second-degree manslaughter of her 7-year-old daughter. She will serve her sentence at the Shakopee Women’s Prison. 

    In March 2023, Travis’ daughter died in the living room of a residence on the 800 block of Sherburne Avenue, according to a criminal complaint. The girl’s cause of death was later identified as fentanyl toxicity and the manner of death was declared as accidental.

    Officers searched Travis’ bedroom and found a straw with “white residue,” the complaint said, along with a pill that was later found to contain fentanyl.  

    At the time of the girl’s death, Travis was in a custody battle over the child with other family members. Travis admitted to officers that she agreed to let her grandmother take custody of the victim so she could “get her life straightened out and get help from her drug addiction,” the complaint said. The girl would’ve been in her grandmother’s custody less than a week after the victim’s death. 

    Travis originally pleaded not guilty to charges, but changed her plea to guilty in January

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    Mackenzie Lofgren

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  • U.K. man gets 37 years for fatally poisoning couple with fentanyl, rewriting their will

    U.K. man gets 37 years for fatally poisoning couple with fentanyl, rewriting their will

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    A British man has been sentenced to 37 years in prison after poisoning a husband and wife with fentanyl and reworking their will to seize control of their business. 

     The sentence for Luke D’Wit is “among the most significant sentences ever secured” after an investigation by Essex Police Department officers, the department said in a news release.

    D’Wit, 34, first met Carol Baxter in 2014, when they were introduced by a mutual friend. D’Wit then began working as an IT consultant for the Baxters’ business, which sold specialty curved bathmats. 

    Over nearly 10 years, D’Wit created “more than 20 personas” which he used to communicate with Carol Baxter and her daughter Ellie, the police news release said. One of those fake personas was as a doctor who was experienced in dealing with Hashimoto’s disease, an autoimmune disease that Baxter had been diagnosed with. 

    Posing as Andrea Bowden, D’Wit made medical suggestions that Carol Baxter followed. These health directions “led to a continued deterioration in her health,” the news release said. D’Wit also posed as fictitious patients of the made-up doctor and even sent voice memos where he affected a female voice to convince Carol Baxter he was a woman named Jenny. These interactions “manipulated and controlled Carol Baxter in the two years before her death” and and allowed D’Wit to exert the “ultimate form of control,” said Lord Justice Lavender, the presiding judge on the case. 

    screen-shot-2024-03-22-at-11-51-00-am.png
    Carol and Stephen Baxter.

    Essex Police


    The couple frequently interacted with D’Wit before their deaths. He visited their home often, the BBC reported. Ellie Baxter told the BBC her parents were “irritated” by these visits. 

    D’Wit last visited the couple on April 7, 2023. Ellie Baxter found her parents dead on April 9 – Easter Sunday. Police found no injuries or obvious causes of death, and carbon monoxide poisoning was quickly ruled out. Toxicology reports showed that both Carol and Stephen Baxter had “died as a result of lethal doses of fentanyl,” the news release said. This spurred police to launch a murder investigation, which turned up the connection to D’Wit. 

    During the course of the investigation, a search of the Baxter home led to the discovery of fentanyl patches and a fake will that left the couple’s company to D’Wit. A different will had been left with the couple’s lawyers. Police also found that a camera had been set up inside the Baxter home to watch them as they died.

    D’Wit was arrested in July and charged with two counts of murder. When he was arrested, police discovered more fentanyl patches in his home as well as a bag of metal tacks and pill casings. Police believe those pills were previously given to Carol Baxter, who had once been admitted to the hospital and found to have tacks in her stomach. 

    screen-shot-2024-03-22-at-11-50-52-am.png
    Luke D’Wit.

    Essex Police


    D’Wit first told the court that he had worked with Stephen Baxter to develop the false personas, but that story fell apart under cross-examination, police said in the news release. Each message from a false persona was traced back to devices in D’Wit’s possession. 

    Lavender called the efforts “macabre” and based on a “significant degree of planning.” Lydia George, the detective inspector who led the investigation into the murders, called D’Wit’s actions those of a “pathological liar.” 

    “Today, though, is not about Luke D’Wit. And it’s not about Essex Police. It’s about Carol and Stephen and it’s about their family,” George said, after the sentencing was announced. “We know nothing will bring Carol and Stephen back. We know nothing can give the family back their loving mother, sister and grandmother or their generous father, brother, son and grandfather. However, I truly hope this sentence is of some comfort to the family as they move forward.” 

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  • Rachel Mitchell endorses Trump, blames Biden for fentanyl crisis

    Rachel Mitchell endorses Trump, blames Biden for fentanyl crisis

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    While President Joe Biden campaigned for reelection in the Valley on Wednesday, Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell endorsed Donald Trump for president, pointing to the fentanyl crisis. “I have seen Biden’s own DEA tell us that in 2022 and 2023, over half of the fentanyl seized in the United States was seized in Arizona,” Mitchell said during her regular biweekly press conference…

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    Stephen Lemons

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  • A grieving Frederick Co. mother diagnosed with ‘broken heart syndrome’ after her daughter died from fentanyl overdose – WTOP News

    A grieving Frederick Co. mother diagnosed with ‘broken heart syndrome’ after her daughter died from fentanyl overdose – WTOP News

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    A Frederick County, Maryland, mother says after her 22-year-old daughter died from a fentanyl overdose in March of 2022, she was diagnosed with “broken heart syndrome.”

    22-year-old Victoria Laster died from a fentanyl overdose in March of 2022. (Courtesy of Faith Laster)

    A Frederick County, Maryland, mother says after her 22-year-old daughter died from a fentanyl overdose in March of 2022, she was diagnosed with “broken heart syndrome.”

    “It ends up destroying your arteries,” said Victoria Laster’s mom, Faith. “Because you’re so stressed, the stress level is what causes the broken heart syndrome. And I ended up having a triple bypass because of it. I was in the hospital for over a month.”

    But Faith said she wasn’t the only one that was impacted by Victoria’s death. She said this loss shook her entire family.

    This weekend, Faith is hosting a vigil in Victoria’s honor and wants people to understand the broader impact this deadly drug has on families.

    A family friend also started a petition calling for harsher penalties for dealers of fentanyl, especially repeat offenders.

    “We believe that stricter penalties for fentanyl dealers can serve as a deterrent and help save lives,” wrote a friend of Faith’s in the petition. “By increasing the minimum sentence for those convicted of dealing fentanyl, we can send a strong message about our society’s stance against this lethal substance.”

    In Maryland, a bill was proposed last week that would adopt tougher laws on fentanyl sales in the state. Senate Bill 1075 and House Bill 1245 specify that the law would apply whether the drug is mixed or combined with any other compound after the sale of the drug. The bill also includes language that states that if the drug is transferred to more than one person, “each person who distributed or delivered the substance is considered to have violated the bill’s prohibition.”

    “I’ve got 49 signatures,” said Laster. “I’m trying to do something, because I promised her before they shut the casket, that I would make sure that I fought for her, the justice that she deserves. I just don’t think it’s fair that all these dealers are being put in jail, and then they’re getting a smack on the hand, and they’re repeat offenders.”

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Cheyenne Corin

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  • Maplewood mother sentenced to 4 years probation for son’s fatal fentanyl overdose

    Maplewood mother sentenced to 4 years probation for son’s fatal fentanyl overdose

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    Morning headlines from March 13, 2024


    Morning headlines from March 13, 2024

    01:56

    HASTINGS, Minn. — The mother of a 3-year-old boy who died of a fentanyl overdose in 2020 was sentenced Wednesday to four years probation, the Dakota County Attorney’s Office announced.

    Queenetta McDaniel, 36, of Maplewood, pled guilty to one count of manslaughter in the second degree on July 24, 2023. The state requested McDaniel be sentenced to 41 months in prison.

    “I am disappointed in the court’s decision given the facts of the case,” Dakota County Attorney Kathy Keena said. “Such a tragic and senseless death due to the negligence of Ms. McDaniel.”

    MORE NEWS: St. Paul man charged with attempted murder, assault after firing at officers in Oakdale

    First responders were called to a West St. Paul apartment on Dec. 7, 2020, on a report of a child not breathing. The child was rushed to Children’s Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

    The Ramsey County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled the boy died of a fentanyl overdose.

    Police suspected that McDaniel was under the influence of drugs at the time due to her behavior. A blood sample collected by investigators showed fentanyl and a metabolite of fentanyl present during a toxicology analysis.

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    Riley Moser

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  • Maplewood mother sentenced to 4 years probation for son’s fatal fentanyl overdose

    Maplewood mother sentenced to 4 years probation for son’s fatal fentanyl overdose

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    Morning headlines from March 13, 2024


    Morning headlines from March 13, 2024

    01:56

    HASTINGS, Minn. — The mother of a 3-year-old boy who died of a fentanyl overdose in 2020 was sentenced Wednesday to four years probation, the Dakota County Attorney’s Office announced.

    Queenetta McDaniel, 36, of Maplewood, pled guilty to one count of manslaughter in the second degree on July 24, 2023. The state requested McDaniel be sentenced to 41 months in prison.

    “I am disappointed in the court’s decision given the facts of the case,” Dakota County Attorney Kathy Keena said. “Such a tragic and senseless death due to the negligence of Ms. McDaniel.”

    MORE NEWS: St. Paul man charged with attempted murder, assault after firing at officers in Oakdale

    First responders were called to a West St. Paul apartment on Dec. 7, 2020, on a report of a child not breathing. The child was rushed to Children’s Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

    The Ramsey County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled the boy died of a fentanyl overdose.

    Police suspected that McDaniel was under the influence of drugs at the time due to her behavior. A blood sample collected by investigators showed fentanyl and a metabolite of fentanyl present during a toxicology analysis.

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  • Mothers share stories of loss as new billboard highlighting fentanyl crisis goes up in Sacramento

    Mothers share stories of loss as new billboard highlighting fentanyl crisis goes up in Sacramento

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    A new billboard is putting real faces behind the deadly fentanyl epidemic in our region. And their moms are speaking out about their lives — and loss.“My life has changed forever,” said Sharon Freeman, a mother who lost her son to fentanyl poisoning just last month. “It’s different.”Drivers traveling southbound on Interstate 5 in North Natomas will see 24 faces of people who lost their lives to the deadly drug. The photos include Freeman’s son, Riley.The organization Drug Induced Homicide organized the billboard, calling on local families to come together for the powerful message. Mareka Cole organized the initiative and encouraged anyone who has lost a child to fentanyl to reach out and seek resources through the organization.Clutching a photo of her son, Izaya, Stephanie Boatright fought back tears.“I just want people to be aware of what this drug is doing,” Boatright said. “It’s not even a drug, this is poison and we’re losing our kids out here left and right.”On Monday, Boatright stood alongside mothers who too know her pain as the new billboard lit up for the first time. “I never thought this would happen to my son, never in a million years,” Boatright said. “This is what’s going on and it’s real life. This is the worst imaginable thing.”Boatright hoped the billboard would prompt change. She wants to see someone held accountable for the many young people accidentally losing their lives due to the drug. Marlena Potter wants that accountability for her son, and others, too.“We need to figure out how to come together. It’s not a political issue it’s how do we to get fentanyl off the street and protect this next generation,” Potter said.Lisa Ezell’s son, Cameron March, died from fentanyl poisoning after purchasing what he believed to be a Percocet, she said. “He had no idea there was fentanyl in it and it killed him immediately,” Ezell said. She encouraged all parents to talk with their children about the dangers of the drug and to understand it may be present within other substances. She hoped the new billboard would help spark conversations amongst family members about the challenging subject.“My son wasn’t a drug addict,” Ezell said. “People still don’t know what fentanyl is. They might see the billboard and look it up and then they might be able to have conversations with their families, their kids, their grandkids.”The billboard will be up in the location along southbound Interstate 5 for a month. Cole said she is working on getting another one up in the region in the coming weeks.

    A new billboard is putting real faces behind the deadly fentanyl epidemic in our region. And their moms are speaking out about their lives — and loss.

    “My life has changed forever,” said Sharon Freeman, a mother who lost her son to fentanyl poisoning just last month. “It’s different.”

    Drivers traveling southbound on Interstate 5 in North Natomas will see 24 faces of people who lost their lives to the deadly drug. The photos include Freeman’s son, Riley.

    The organization Drug Induced Homicide organized the billboard, calling on local families to come together for the powerful message. Mareka Cole organized the initiative and encouraged anyone who has lost a child to fentanyl to reach out and seek resources through the organization.

    Clutching a photo of her son, Izaya, Stephanie Boatright fought back tears.

    “I just want people to be aware of what this drug is doing,” Boatright said. “It’s not even a drug, this is poison and we’re losing our kids out here left and right.”

    On Monday, Boatright stood alongside mothers who too know her pain as the new billboard lit up for the first time.

    “I never thought this would happen to my son, never in a million years,” Boatright said. “This is what’s going on and it’s real life. This is the worst imaginable thing.”

    Boatright hoped the billboard would prompt change. She wants to see someone held accountable for the many young people accidentally losing their lives due to the drug. Marlena Potter wants that accountability for her son, and others, too.

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    “We need to figure out how to come together. It’s not a political issue it’s how do we to get fentanyl off the street and protect this next generation,” Potter said.

    Lisa Ezell’s son, Cameron March, died from fentanyl poisoning after purchasing what he believed to be a Percocet, she said.

    “He had no idea there was fentanyl in it and it killed him immediately,” Ezell said.

    She encouraged all parents to talk with their children about the dangers of the drug and to understand it may be present within other substances. She hoped the new billboard would help spark conversations amongst family members about the challenging subject.

    “My son wasn’t a drug addict,” Ezell said. “People still don’t know what fentanyl is. They might see the billboard and look it up and then they might be able to have conversations with their families, their kids, their grandkids.”

    The billboard will be up in the location along southbound Interstate 5 for a month.

    Cole said she is working on getting another one up in the region in the coming weeks.

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  • Ex-pharmacy tech charged with murder in South Bay fentanyl overdose

    Ex-pharmacy tech charged with murder in South Bay fentanyl overdose

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    Fentanyl crisis: What makes the drug so deadly


    Fentanyl crisis: What makes the drug so deadly

    03:08

    MORGAN HILL – A disgraced pharmacy technician who lost his state license has been charged with murder in connection with the fentanyl overdose death of a South Bay woman, prosecutors said.

    The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office confirmed to CBS News Bay Area that 34-year-old Benjamin Nathan Williams was charged Friday with murder and felony drug sales in the death of 26-year-old Hope Warrick last year.

    According to an investigation by the Sheriff’s Office, Warrick was found dead in her apartment in unincorporated Morgan Hill on Feb. 13, 2023 by her mother.

    The Santa Clara County Medical Examiner’s Office determined that Warrick had cocaine, amphetamine and fentanyl in her system when she died. Tests determined the substance found in Warrick’s home contained both cocaine and fentanyl.

    During a search of Warrick’s phone, deputies said she performed a Google search on “how to tell if there is fentnynl (sic) in something.”

    Investigators also found a conversation between the victim and Williams that took place the night before her death. The messages purportedly show Williams selling Warrick what she believed was cocaine and “added in some extra for her.”

    Investigators said drug dealers often add fentanyl to narcotics to produce a stronger high.

    According to the Department of Consumer Affairs Board of Pharmacy, Williams had previously served as a pharmacy technician at the Walgreens in Marina, near Monterey. Williams’ license was revoked in 2021 after he admitted to stealing pills, including hydrocodone and morphine.

    Deputies said Williams was arrested on Nov. 8, 2023 in Morgan Hill on suspicion of robbery and evading a police officer. Following the arrest, Williams’ phone was seized, which also revealed the same messages sent between William and Warrick.

    Jail records show Williams is being held at the Santa Clara County Jail on $71,000 bail.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Washington State House Advances Bill To Provide Relief For Tribes Fighting Opioid Crisis – KXL

    Washington State House Advances Bill To Provide Relief For Tribes Fighting Opioid Crisis – KXL

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    SEATTLE (AP) — A bill that would bring millions of dollars to tribes in Washington state to address the opioid crisis received unanimous support in the House on Friday, opening the door for state funding to address a scourge that some say is claiming a generation.

    “This bill invests in Indian country. It invests in the Native Americans of Washington state. It invests in the preservation of generations of Native Americans whose land we stand on today,” Democratic Rep. Debra?Lekanoff, who is Tlingit and Aleut, said during the vote.

    The proposed measure is expected to provide nearly $8 million each year for the 29 federally recognized tribes in Washington, funds drawn in part from a roughly half-billion-dollar settlement between the state and major opioid distributors.

    The approach comes as Native Americans and Alaska Natives in Washington die of opioid overdoses at five times the state average, according to 2021-2022 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data that includes provisional numbers. The rate in Washington is one of the highest in the U.S. and more than three times the rate nationwide — but many of the Indigenous nations in the state lack the funding or medical resources to fully address it.

    The state Senate previously unanimously approved the bill, but it will need to go back to the body for verification before going on to Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee’s desk. Jaime Smith, a spokesperson for the governor’s office, said in an email that Inslee “has been very supportive of this effort and appreciates the work of legislators to bolster our state’s opioid response on multiple fronts, including support for Tribes.”

    But some tribes say the proposed funding, while appreciated, would barely scratch the surface in the face of such a deadly crisis.

    Opioid overdose deaths for Native Americans and Alaska Natives have increased dramatically during the past few years in Washington, with at least 100 in 2022 — 75 more than in 2019, according to the most recent numbers available from the Washington State Department of Health.

    Republican state Sen. John Braun, one of the bill’s sponsors, has said this is just a first step.

    “This is just going to get us started, and make sure we’re not sitting on our hands, waiting for the problem to solve itself,” he said.

    The bill would earmark funds deposited into an opioid settlement account, which includes money from the state’s $518 million settlement in 2022 with the nation’s three largest opioid distributors, for tribes battling addiction. Tribes are expected to receive $7.75 million or 20% of the funds deposited into the account the previous fiscal year — whichever is greater — annually.

    The money provided through the legislation does not come with a specific end date. But starting in 2031, there would no longer be a minimum required dollar amount, according to an amendment approved Friday. The state would provide 20% of the money deposited in an opioid settlement account during the prior fiscal year. And if the average amount deposited into that account gets too low, no funding would be required to go to the tribes.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Oregon nurse replaced patient’s fentanyl drip with tap water, wrongful death lawsuit alleges

    Oregon nurse replaced patient’s fentanyl drip with tap water, wrongful death lawsuit alleges

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    The first lawsuit brought amid reports that a nurse at a southern Oregon hospital replaced intravenous fentanyl drips with tap water seeks up to $11.5 million on behalf of the estate of a 65-year-old man who died.

    The wrongful death suit was filed Monday against Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford, CBS affiliate KOIN-TV reported. It also names nurse Dani Marie Schofield as a defendant.

    Last month, Medford police disclosed that they were investigating potential crimes against patients involving the theft of “controlled substances,” which may have led to “adverse” outcomes for some.

    Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid that has helped fuel the nation’s overdose epidemic, but it is also used in legitimate medical settings to relieve severe pain. Drug theft from hospitals is a longstanding problem.

    Police declined to provide more information. Schofield agreed to a voluntary nursing license suspension last November “pending the completion of an investigation,” according to Oregon Board of Nursing records. No charges have been filed.

    Justin Idiart, a southern Oregon lawyer, told The Oregonian/OregonLive that he represents nine clients whose medication was swapped out, and five others have reached out for possible representation. They include the loved ones of patients who died as well as some who survived. All of his clients were treated by Schofield, he said.

    Other local law firms also have been exploring litigation. Attorneys say they expect as many as three dozen cases could be filed.

    The hospital did not immediately return an email from The Associated Press seeking comment Tuesday. The AP could not immediately locate contact information for Schofield, and it was not clear if Schofield is represented by an attorney.

    “We were distressed to learn of this issue,” Asante said in a statement last month. “We reported it to law enforcement and are working closely with them.”

    Idiart filed the lawsuit in Jackson County Circuit Court over the death of Horace E. Wilson, who died in February 2022. Wilson, the founder of a cannabis company called Decibel Farms in Jacksonville, Oregon, was treated at the hospital after he fell off a ladder. He suffered bleeding from his spleen and had it removed.

    But doctors then noted “unexplained high fevers, very high white blood cell counts, and a precipitous decline,” the complaint said.

    The medical center ordered Schofield to administer fentanyl to the patient starting on Jan. 29, KOIN-TV reported, citing court documents. Plaintiffs are alleging the nurse replaced the fentanyl with non-sterile tap water, bringing more bacteria into his bloodstream.

    Oregon Medication Tampering
    Syringes of the opioid painkiller fentanyl are shown in an inpatient pharmacy on June 1, 2018, in Salt Lake City. 

    Rick Bowmer / AP


    Tests confirmed an infection of treatment-resistant bacteria, Staphylococcus epidermidis. Wilson progressed to multi-system organ failure and died weeks later.

    Court documents said the hospital reported three central-line associated bloodstream infections in 2021, which surged to 15 cases in 2022, KOIN reported. Plaintiffs also allege Asante admitted the infections were linked to bacteria in April 2023, KOIN reported, but the company didn’t report water contamination at any of its medical centers.

    Idiart said patients who were deprived of medication suffered as a result of the medication diversion. In Wilson’s case, his family believed he was in pain even though he was supposed to be sedated, Idiart said.

    Asante last December contacted Medford police regarding a former employee “that they believe was involved in the theft of fentanyl prescribed to patients resulting in some adverse patient outcomes,” the complaint said.

    That month, hospital representatives “began contacting patients and their relatives telling them a nurse had replaced fentanyl with tap water causing bacterial infections,” it said.

    “We continue to request the public’s patience as we strive to understand the full implications of these allegations and their effects on those involved,” Medford Police said in a statement, KOIN reported.

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  • Baby Phoenix hearing: Defense lawyer, coroner spar over whether suffocation, not fentanyl overdose, caused infant’s death

    Baby Phoenix hearing: Defense lawyer, coroner spar over whether suffocation, not fentanyl overdose, caused infant’s death

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    SAN JOSE — A defense lawyer suggested in court Wednesday that David Castro’s infant daughter Phoenix died of accidental smothering while sleeping on the couch with her father, not from a fentanyl overdose.

    But a Santa Clara County coroner who conducted the autopsy and found methamphetamine and fentanyl in the 3-month-old baby’s system vehemently disagreed.

    “There is no indication of suffocation in this case,” Dr. Mehdi Koolaee testified during the second day of Castro’s preliminary hearing. “This is a drug death.”

    The coroner also testified that he believed the baby died roughly 24 to 36 hours before she was rushed to the hospital the morning of May 13, 2023. That puzzling revelation is at odds with the story Castro told a detective: that he fell asleep on the couch with the baby on his chest the night before while watching a movie, and he didn’t notice anything wrong with her until the next morning when she was cold to the touch.

    The death last spring of baby Phoenix Castro, whose two older siblings were removed from their parents’ custody a year earlier because of severe neglect, led to calls in recent months for an overhaul of the county’s child welfare agency that sent Phoenix home with her father, who had a history of drug use.

    It also led to Castro’s arrest on felony child endangerment and other enhancements that could land him in prison for up to 10 years if found guilty.

    Castro’s preliminary hearing is scheduled to end Thursday and will determine whether there is enough evidence to send the case to trial.

    The charges against Castro are less severe than the murder charges against the parents of three other Bay Area infants and toddlers who have died of fentanyl poisoning since 2020.

    While cross examining the coroner Wednesday, defense lawyer Mishya Singh pointed out that the baby died face down because blood had “pooled” there, making her face dark red. Although Koolaee agreed the baby died face down, he reiterated that “in my opinion, unsafe sleeping has nothing to do with this death.”

    The defense lawyer also pointed out that the amount of methamphetamine and fentanyl in the baby’s blood stream was “low” and that she could have developed a tolerance for it because she was born with both in her system — opening the door to a different cause of death. She also said that because the blood tested by the lab was from the heart instead of the limbs, the concentration of drugs there could appear higher than they were when the baby died, another indication that something else could have been an overriding factor in her death, she said.

    “Would it be fair to say your finding should have been ‘undetermined’ rather than drug poisoning?” Singh asked.

    “No,” the coroner said.

    “Would that mean you would have to admit you were wrong?” she asked.

    “There is no reason to change it,” Koolaee said. “Everything is not supporting any asphyxial or suffocating. This is a drug death.”

    “If other medical examiners disagreed, would you still stick to your finding?” she asked.

    “Absolutely.”

    Four other medical examiners in the Santa Clara County Coroner’s Office agreed with his determination, he said.

    San Jose Police Det. Mike Harrington also testified Wednesday, and explained his conversation with Castro when he arrived that May morning. Castro told him that he had fallen asleep the night before watching a movie. He woke up the next morning, smoked a cigarette, had some breakfast and made a bottle of formula for the baby. It wasn’t until he began to change her diaper the next morning that “he realized something was not right with Phoenix,” Harrington testified. “She wasn’t warm like she normally is.”

    Castro told him that “he wasn’t really sure what to do,” and about 20 minutes passed until a friend showed up unannounced and told him to call 911, which he did. The baby’s mother and maternal grandmother coincidentally showed up a few minutes after that.

    Castro said he was living alone with his daughter while the baby’s mother was in a drug and mental health treatment center.

    Castro told the detective that he had stopped using drugs about two months before Phoenix was born.

    Earlier Wednesday, San Jose Police crime scene investigator Ian Carabarin testified that he found drug paraphernalia, including glass pipes and burned tinfoil, in a box on top of the refrigerator, drugs in a black bag in a kitchen cabinet and a tar-like substance that looked like heroin in a yellow Lego box in the dining room.

    “You didn’t find drugs laying out in plain view?” Singh asked.

    “Correct,” he said.

    Carabarin also acknowledged that he couldn’t say whose drugs they were for certain or the last time they had been used.

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    Julia Prodis Sulek

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  • Lawsuit Seeks Up To $11.5 Million Over Allegations That Oregon Nurse Replaced Fentanyl Drip With Tap Water – KXL

    Lawsuit Seeks Up To $11.5 Million Over Allegations That Oregon Nurse Replaced Fentanyl Drip With Tap Water – KXL

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    MEDFORD, Ore. (AP) — The first lawsuit brought amid reports that a nurse at a southern Oregon hospital replaced intravenous fentanyl drips with tap water seeks up to $11.5 million on behalf of the estate of a 65-year-old man who died.

    The wrongful death suit was filed Monday against Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported. It also names nurse Dani Marie Schofield as a defendant.

    Last month, Medford police disclosed that they were investigating potential crimes against patients involving the theft of “controlled substances,” which may have led to “adverse” outcomes for some.

    Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid that has helped fuel the nation’s overdose epidemic, but it is also used in legitimate medical settings to relieve severe pain. Drug theft from hospitals is a longstanding problem.

    Police declined to provide more information. Schofield agreed to a voluntary nursing license suspension last November “pending the completion of an investigation,” according to Oregon Board of Nursing records. No charges have been filed.

    Justin Idiart, a southern Oregon lawyer, told The Oregonian/OregonLive that he represents nine clients whose medication was swapped out, and five others have reached out for possible representation. They include the loved ones of patients who died as well as some who survived. All of his clients were treated by Schofield, he said.

    Other local law firms also have been exploring litigation. Attorneys say they expect as many as three dozen cases could be filed.

    The hospital did not immediately return an email from The Associated Press seeking comment Tuesday. The AP could not immediately locate contact information for Schofield, and it was not clear if Schofield is represented by an attorney.

    “We were distressed to learn of this issue,” Asante said in a statement last month. “We reported it to law enforcement and are working closely with them.”

    Idiart filed the lawsuit in Jackson County Circuit Court over the death of Horace E. Wilson, who died in February 2022. Wilson, the founder of a cannabis company called Decibel Farms in Jacksonville, Oregon, was treated at the hospital after he fell off a ladder. He suffered bleeding from his spleen and had it removed.

    But doctors then noted “unexplained high fevers, very high white blood cell counts, and a precipitous decline,” the complaint said. Tests confirmed an infection of treatment-resistant bacteria, Staphylococcus epidermidis. Wilson progressed to multi-system organ failure and died weeks later.

    Idiart said patients who were deprived of medication suffered as a result of the medication diversion. In Wilson’s case, his family believed he was in pain even though he was supposed to be sedated, Idiart said.

    Asante last December contacted Medford police regarding a former employee “that they believe was involved in the theft of fentanyl prescribed to patients resulting in some adverse patient outcomes,” the complaint said.

    That month, hospital representatives “began contacting patients and their relatives telling them a nurse had replaced fentanyl with tap water causing bacterial infections,” it said.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Sewage could be California’s next tool in fighting the opioid epidemic

    Sewage could be California’s next tool in fighting the opioid epidemic

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    A California legislator is proposing a new law that would require routine tests of statewide wastewater for illicit drugs to better inform public health and law enforcement officials.

    Propelled by the success of epidemiological sewage testing during the COVID-19 pandemic, public health officials have continued to build on ways that wastewater monitoring can be used to inform policies and practices. In December, the National Institute on Drug Abuse announced a pilot program to test wastewater for illegal drugs and overdose reversing agents, such as Narcan, in 70 cities across the nation, including San Francisco and San Diego.

    Assemblymember Matt Haney (D-San Francisco) would like to see that work expanded statewide to aid in the response to the ongoing opioid epidemic. Last year became San Francisco’s deadliest for drug overdoses, and in Los Angeles, fentanyl — the synthetic opioid 50 times more potent than heroin — became the leading cause of the city’s rising overdose deaths.

    Haney’s new bill, AB 3073, would require biweekly testing of the state’s largest wastewater facilities for drugs, including fentanyl, cocaine, methamphetamine and xylazine, an increasingly deadly drug also called Tranq. If passed, the law would create a process for the collection and testing of sewage, led by the State Water Board with the State Department of Public Health, which would publicly share the results.

    “Wastewater drug testing empowers us to be proactive and respond effectively and immediately when we see spikes in certain areas or of particular drugs,” Haney, chair of the state’s Select Committee on Fentanyl, Opioid Addiction and Overdose Prevention, said in a statement. “The state cannot simply wait for people to die before we act.”

    He said the wastewater results can provide “critical information to respond quicker to stop these drugs and intervene smarter and deploy resources with more precision.”

    The bill hasn’t yet been analyzed for its fiscal impact, but Haney’s spokesperson Nate Allbee said their office estimates that a test for each major plant — of which there are 250 statewide — would cost about $200. Done twice a week, which the bill said would provide sufficient data to analyze drug trends, the testing regimen would cost the state an estimated $100,000 a week.

    Testing wastewater for illicit drugs has been implemented widely in Europe for the past 20 years, Allbee said. He said this practice has helped local governments detect spikes in the use of certain drugs and identify new, potentially dangerous drugs entering the illicit market.

    “Despite the fact that the United States is experiencing an unprecedented deadly epidemic from drug overdoses, we are way behind the curve in adopting wastewater-based drug testing” to combat the opioid epidemic, Haney said. “Other countries have proven that testing wastewater for illicit drugs allows public health departments to identify trends in drug use in neighborhoods and proactively target public health interventions in communities before overdose deaths occur.”

    Wastewater testing continues to be one of the most reliable sources for tracking COVID-19 spikes.

    Haney’s bill isn’t yet scheduled for a committee hearing, but Allbee said it should be heard by the Assembly Health committee in the coming weeks.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • State senators respond to fentanyl and retail theft crises with new legislation

    State senators respond to fentanyl and retail theft crises with new legislation

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    A bipartisan group of lawmakers in the California senate on Monday announced a package of legislation to address the growing fentanyl crisis and untamed outbreak of organized retail thefts.

    Sen. Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg), who was sworn in as president pro tempore last month, recited sobering statistics to reporters as he introduced proposals he said will remedy the issues through a more rehabilitative approach.

    “There are more than 12,000 drug overdose deaths a year in California. More than half of those deaths are fentanyl-related,” McGuire said. “Black and Latino communities have seen a 200% increase in overdose deaths since 2017. Native Americans had a 150% increase in overdose deaths in the same period. The Hoopa Valley tribe faces a fentanyl death rate eight times greater than the state average.”

    The senate’s action comes after Assembly leaders this month presented their plans to remedy the issues, an indication that the drug and theft crises will be priorities this legislative session — and in California’s 2024 election.

    The set of 14 bills announced by McGuire and other Democrat and Republican Senate leaders takes a sweeping approach. The legislation, if passed and signed by the governor, would increase access to treatment, enhance addiction services for those in the criminal justice system and penalize criminal trafficking of xylazine, or “tranq,” a horse tranquilizer laced in fentanyl.

    Among those bills is SB 1144, authored by Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley), which will tighten regulations to help prevent stolen goods from being sold online.

    Tinisch Hollins, executive director of the nonprofit Californians for Safety and Justice, called the package a “thoughtful approach to nuanced challenges.”

    Hollins said the package is needed “in an environment where special interests are gaslighting Californians with destructive and ineffective rollbacks.”

    She was referring to law enforcement agencies that have lobbied for changes to Proposition 47, a contentious ballot measure that reduced certain retail theft and drug offense charges to misdemeanors.

    Contra Costa County Dist. Atty. Diana Becton called for a strategic approach that strays from a one-size-fits-all approach to public safety.

    “I have seen firsthand the need to reimagine our approach to criminal justice,” she said. “To reexamine and reproach it through a lens of racial and socioeconomic disparity, with an eye to restorative justice programs and rehabilitation programs for nonviolent offenses.”

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    Anabel Sosa

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  • 2/20: CBS Evening News

    2/20: CBS Evening News

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    2/20: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    2 men charged with murder in Kansas City Chiefs parade shooting; Inside the new task force hoping to hold dealers responsible for fentanyl deaths

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  • Opinion: ‘Just say no’ can kill kids. Teach them how to stay safe in the fentanyl era

    Opinion: ‘Just say no’ can kill kids. Teach them how to stay safe in the fentanyl era

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    Melanie Ramos was only 15 years old when she died of a suspected overdose in a high school bathroom in Hollywood. Police reported that she and a friend had purchased pills they thought were prescription painkillers but which were likely fakes containing fentanyl, a potent opioid incorporated into counterfeit pills widely available in the illicit drug market.

    Fentanyl has caused such overdoses to rise sharply despite declining drug use among young people. Recent data suggest it kills an average of 22 teens every week around the nation. Tragic stories like Melanie’s are playing out across the country — and at an unprecedented rate. In a new analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine, we found that fatal overdoses among U.S. teens aged 14-18 hit an all-time high in 2022.

    Melanie was one of 111 teens who died between 2020 and 2022 in L.A. County, a hot spot where overdoses have spiked. We found hot spot counties across the U.S., but Southern California was uniquely hard hit. Of the 19 such counties we identified nationwide, six were in this region: Los Angeles, Orange (61 deaths), San Bernardino (55), Riverside (41), San Diego (36) and Kern (30).

    There are signs that teen overdoses in California dropped from 2021 to 2022, but this trend is still new, and hot spots can still occur anywhere — often unexpectedly. Every corner of America should be prepared.

    Overdose deaths are preventable. However, reducing teen overdoses requires a dramatic shift in drug-prevention programming: It needs to emphasize safety rather than abstinence alone.

    Drug use by teens is becoming more deadly, not more common. From 2002 to 2022, the share of high school seniors who had ever used illicit drugs declined from 21% to 8%. Teen drug use overall is at its lowest rate in decades. But fentanyl, which is found not only in counterfeit pills but also as a contaminant in other drugs, puts teens at unprecedented risk. Nearly two-thirds of teens who die from fentanyl have no known prior opioid use, a reminder that even first-time or infrequent exposure can be deadly.

    Drug prevention has long focused on keeping teens from trying drugs, which is a worthy goal. But it has lacked messaging for teens who do use and may end up in danger as a result. Teachers, parents, medical practitioners and others who provide drug prevention counseling should clearly communicate that any pill not prescribed by a physician or dispensed by a pharmacy has a significant chance of being a counterfeit containing a potentially lethal amount of fentanyl.

    This does not mean using scare tactics, which have been shown to backfire. As modeled by programs such as Safety First, available through Stanford, this approach should instead tap into teens’ desire to keep themselves and their peers safe and give them strategies to do so.

    These strategies include never using alone (so someone is available to intervene in an overdose), starting with a small amount of a drug (e.g., a quarter pill rather than a whole pill) to assess its potency, and avoiding mixing pills with alcohol and other sedating substances.

    Programming should also help teens recognize the signs of an overdose and teach them how to respond — by calling 911 and providing the nasal spray naloxone (Narcan) if it’s available. Schools should have naloxone on the premises — as has been the case in the L.A. Unified School District since late 2022, following Melanie Ramos’ death — and help teens understand how to access it on and off campus. Narcan recently became available over the counter, and teens can obtain it at pharmacies or get a doctor’s prescription for it.

    Teens who seek out pills to address depression, anxiety, trauma or other mental health concerns additionally need referrals to evidence-based mental health treatment such as counseling and, when appropriate, medications — which should be distinguished from the counterfeit pills widely available on the illicit market.

    There are some young people who might intentionally seek fentanyl, including the 1 in every 100 U.S. teens who has an opioid addiction. Keeping these adolescents safe requires educating them and their peers on how to recognize signs of addiction, where to receive care and the effectiveness of buprenorphine, a lifesaving but underused treatment for opioid misuse. Given the urgent need to intervene early, schools, families and doctors should be aware of local treatment programs and refer teens to them; the federal government maintains a searchable directory.

    Emphasizing safety in drug use messaging to young people will encounter opposition from policymakers and others, as it means confronting the uncomfortable reality that some teens use drugs. However, research indicates that teaching safety does not cause teens to use more drugs. Drug-prevention programming can still tell teens they shouldn’t use substances while equipping them with the tools to protect themselves if they do. Teens need this knowledge before more young lives are tragically lost.

    Scott Hadland (@DrScottHadland) is the chief of adolescent medicine at Mass General for Children and an associate professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. Joseph Friedman (@JosephRFriedman) is a substance-use researcher at UCLA.



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    Scott Hadland and Joseph Friedman

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