Pubdate: Mon, 28 Aug 2000 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2000 Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: P.O. Box 85333, Richmond, VA 23293 Fax: (804) 775-8072 Feedback: http://www.gatewayva.com/feedback/totheeditor.shtml Website: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Author: Mark Bowes HEROIN TOLL RISING / DRUG'S PURITY HERE CAUSING PROBLEMS At least 17 Richmond area people have died this year from overdoses of heroin, raising concern among police that the drug is making a deadly comeback here. Local authorities are so alarmed about the resurgence of heroin trafficking and abuse that they plan to issue a joint statement today to warn the public. "If you take a look at the entire region, it's definitely a problem," said Chesterfield County Police Chief Carl Baker. "It's a police problem but it's a community problem, too." The drug's unusually high purity in the Richmond area, combined with the inexperience of many of the area's younger heroin users, is believed to be behind the escalating number of overdoses and deaths, officials say. The purity of heroin sold in the Richmond area hovers around 70 percent, compared with 35 percent to 40 percent nationally. Some of the heroin here has tested as high as 90 percent pure, and many of the younger users are snorting it rather than injecting it. "Heroin is certainly re-establishing itself as a prominent drug, not only in the inner cities where it traditionally and historically has been, but spreading to suburbia in the major metropolitan areas," said Frank Chellino, special agent in charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency for Virginia, Washington and Maryland. "When you start seeing that type of rapid escalation in overdoses and deaths in a suburban area, that's a clear indication of the availability and purity of the drug, and of the ability of heroin -- which is very addictive -- to spread to suburban areas," he added. Chellino compared the recent heroin scourge here to that of Plano, Texas, where nearly 20 mostly young and affluent people have died during the past three years from heroin use. In Henrico County, police know of at least 22 drug overdoses from heroin use - -- eight of them fatal -- since Jan. 1. Five of the victims were younger than 30, two were in their mid-to late-30s and one was 50; five of the eight were white males. In Richmond, at least five people have died abusing heroin; four have died in Chesterfield. Hanover, which recorded six heroin deaths in 1997-98, has had none this year, according to figures supplied by area police departments. Chesterfield police are aware of 17 heroin overdose cases in the county this year, including the four that were fatal. The total number of heroin-related overdoses in the city was not available. Hanover has had at least one non-fatal heroin overdose since January. Chellino cited four contributing factors in explaining the area's overdose epidemic. In addition to the drug's purity, "you also have to factor in the dosage unit being taken, the experience level of the people using it and their tolerance for the drug," Chellino noted. "I think what you may be experiencing here -- although I'm not a doctor -- is that you may have a lot of these suburban-type youths using this drug, as opposed to regular heroin users." The younger abusers "have not built up a tolerance over a number of years and do not know what type of quantity in terms of dosage to use, and they have very little experience in terms of using heroin." Chesterfield's Baker said the local purity is so high partly because "some of these [heroin] dealers aren't sophisticated enough to cut it and sell it. They're just selling it as they get it. The heroin out there is very dangerous." Henrico police Capt. Neil Bero, commander of the department's Organized Crime and Covert Unit, said there's no evidence of the heroin being "laced with anything" to make it more deadly. "It's just that we're seeing more of it," he said. Bero said narcotics investigators are increasing efforts to find the sources of the drug. "We've opened up some drug cases on these people [who have overdosed]," Bero said. "We're trying to figure out as best we can where the heroin is coming from, where they purchased it. And then if we can make any cases on it, we do." In one recent case in Henrico, authorities called an admitted heroin addict before a Richmond multijurisdictional grand jury in an effort to learn where he was getting his drugs. Police and rescue personnel responded twice in six weeks to his home after he overdosed, court records show. During an overdose July 1, the 28-year-old man nearly died. Authorities found him lying on the living room floor unconscious, with needle "track marks" on both of his forearms. Suburban authorities hope to get a better handle on the counties' drug problems with the recent formation of a multijurisdictional grand jury based in Hanover County. The grand jury, the third of its type in the Richmond-Petersburg area, will focus on drug trafficking in Henrico, Chesterfield and Hanover. "We need to concentrate more on drug activity of the people here in the counties," said Henrico Police Chief Henry W. Stanley Jr. "And if we can do that here in the county, and at the same time still have a concerted effort with the city, it gives us an option as to where to concentrate. And sometimes that's better." Henrico, Hanover and Chesterfield already are part of a multijurisdictional grand jury based in South Richmond that also serves the city. The grand juries are empowered to investigate primarily narcotics trafficking and other drug-related crimes. Chellino said the heroin problem here and in the Baltimore and Washington areas generally can be traced to "the emergence of the Colombian drug lords" into heroin trafficking. "I think the Colombians have become very adept at refining and making very pure heroin," Chellino said. "And I think the percentages that we're seeing in the country, particularly in Richmond -- which by the way is higher than in Baltimore or Washington -- is causing these overdoses and deaths that we're seeing." Baker said he feels compelled to alert the public. "Obviously we have some young people involved," the chief said, "and maybe - -- even if parents or a spouse or someone knows of a problem -- with this information out there we can save one or two lives." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk