Pubdate: Fri, 08 Oct 2004 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2004 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 COUNTY FEARS RISE IN DRUG DEATHS Campbell County officials believe there may have been as many as seven opiate and prescription drug-related deaths there over the last three months, already exceeding the six during the first half of this year. Four of the seven most recent deaths have been confirmed as opiate-related by state medical examiners, but Campbell County Coroner Mark Schweitzer said in the three other cases, preliminary observations at the time of death pointed to opiate use. If those three are confirmed as opiate-related, that would bring Campbell County's total for the year to 13. Boone County has seen only three opiate deaths so far in 2004, while Kenton has seen 10. In Hamilton County, there have been 31 deaths from opiates. The major culprit in Campbell right now looks to be heroin, possibly a more potent supply. State medical examiners say that seven of the 10 confirmed drug-related deaths this year in Campbell County stemmed from some type of opiate use. The state ruled that an overdose of heroin, one of the most common opiates, caused the deaths of a 23-year-old Newport man and a 41 year-old Southgate woman in August. Schweitzer said in the last two weeks he has seen four deaths in which preliminary observations pointed to heroin or prescription drug use. Those signs include foaming on the victims' mouths and drug paraphernalia on the premises. The latest death was on Sept. 19, a 38-year-old Dayton man. Schweitzer declined to identify the victims because state medical examiners hadn't made official rulings yet. "We're definitely seeing a lot of these cases, but I don't know if that means we're necessarily going to have more of these types of deaths than we did last year," said Schweitzer, noting that last year Campbell had about 20 opiate/prescription drug-related deaths. "These seem to occur in waves, but we'll just have to see." The spike in drug-related deaths in Campbell could signal that there is a new supply or supplier in the area, officials say. Jim Liles, executive director of the Northern Kentucky Drug Task Force, said opiate and prescription drug abusers tend to take the same amount each time. But they can run into a potentially fatal problem if an especially potent or tainted supply comes into the market and users don't adjust their fixes. "It's a case where you have people using a drug that is 10 percent pure and then all the sudden moving up to something that is 90 percent pure and their bodies just can't take it," Liles said. "A lot of times, the user will still have the needle stuck in their arm when we find them." Deputy Campbell County Coroner Al Garnick, who worked the two heroin deaths in August, said both appeared to be linked to an especially powerful supply of the drug. After shooting up, the Dayton man had time to take only a single bite of a sandwich before he died. And the Southgate woman who overdosed was holding a cigarette that had burned all the way down to her hand, leaving Garnick to surmise she lit the cigarette shortly after shooting up and didn't live long enough to finish it. "I've never seen this many drugs on the street, and I've been a coroner for 19 years," he said. "The situation is getting worse, not better." Schweitzer and Garnick worry that they could see more drug deaths if funding for law enforcement programs such as the Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force continue to see budget cuts. Liles had to cut his budget after he received only $167,000 in state money -- $9,000 less than he'd asked for -- for the program. Boone, Campbell and Kenton counties each kick in about $100,000 each, and law enforcement agencies loan officers. The rest of the strike force's budget has come from drug forfeiture money, but most of that has dried up, Liles said. That's attributed to two factors: an absence of big cases in recent months from which to make forfeitures, and a trend to more small, transient drug operations such as mobile methamphetamine labs, where there are fewer assets to confiscate. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek