Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2001 Source: Bluefield Daily Telegraph (WV) Copyright: 2001 Bluefield Daily Telegraph Contact: http://www.bdtonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1483 Author: Charles Owens, of the Daily Telegraph staff Note: Only the 8th of the top ten stories is being posted below. Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/find?345 (Hallucinogens) http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) Flooding, Terrorism Cap Region's Biggest Stories Editor's note: 2001 was filled with many stories of triumph and happiness, tragedy and sadness. With that in mind, the Daily Telegraph staff recaps the region's top ten stories of the past year. 8. OXYCONTIN CRISIS TAZEWELL, Va. - The abuse of the prescription narcotic OxyContin reached near epidemic levels in Southwest Virginia in 2001, as the death toll from abuse of the painkiller increased throughout the year. Tazewell County gained national attention when a man was charged with the state's first murder case related to an OxyContin overdose, as regional law enforcement officials intensified their campaign against the widespread drug addiction in the region. The abuse of oxycodone, the active ingredient in many painkillers including OxyContin, became widespread only after OxyContin was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1996. Tazewell County Commonwealth Attorney Dennis Lee declared early in the year that the abuse of OxyContin had reached epidemic levels in the region, adding cases related to the painkiller was clogging the local court system. "We are still seeing it everyday in the courts," Lee said earlier in the year. "The backlog is tremendous on these cases. The toxicology work takes forever to get back." However, the epidemic is changing, according to Lee. In the past, addicts would go "doctor shopping" in the region, which is the practice of visiting different doctors for the purpose of obtaining prescriptions for OxyContin. However, the addicts are now responsible for a growing number of robberies and breaking and enterings in the region. In most instances, the only thing stolen during the pharmacy burglaries is OxyContin. The crisis gained national attention when a Richlands man pleaded guilty on July 23 to a charge of felony homicide in connection with a fatal OxyContin overdose. Robert Maurice Stallard, 43, of 100 Oxford Square Apartments No. 58 in Richlands, was arrested last year after being indicted by the county's grand jury on charges that he supplied the drugs that killed a man and then dumped the man's body. Stallard was charged with felony homicide, distribution of oxycodone, a schedule II controlled substance, and disposing of a dead body. The charges came as a result of the investigation into the death of Nicholas Keith Dickerson, 40, of No. 66, Oxford Square Apartments. Stallard entered the guilty plea just minutes before he was scheduled to stand trial on the charges. He was later sentenced by Tazewell County Circuit Court Judge Donald Mullins to 13 years and six months in prison. Although the epidemic was slowly beginning to moderate by the year's end, new challenges await law enforcement officials. In fact, officials are now warning of a possible new wave of drug abuse in the region. The latest threat is believed to center around hallucinogenic drugs, including the so-called party drugs like Ecstasy. The abuse of such hallucinogenic drugs has now been reported in Northern Virginia, and officials fear such abuse in Southwest Virginia is next. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake