Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 Source: Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City, UT) Copyright: 2005 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 Author: Pat Reavy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HEROIN HITS UTAH'S YOUNG Teens Die As Use Spreads Among The Middle Class A drug with a long, ugly history in the United States seems to be making a comeback in Utah. But this time, heroin isn't just affecting the stereotypical junkie -- a homeless person with no teeth and needle marks all over his arms. Instead, it's becoming a drug of choice for the teenage boy or girl next door who excels in school and appears to come from a stable home. "It's an epidemic with what we've seen -- young, middle-to upper-class kids," said Taylorsville Police Sgt. Keith Stephens. "Salt Lake has turned into a mecca of cheap, low-grade heroin." Arrest statistics wouldn't support the notion of an increasing drug problem among teens, said Salt Lake County Sheriff's Sgt. Shane Hudson, the supervisor of the department's school programs. Instead, the most public indicator may be the young faces found in the pages of the newspaper, either in the police news or the obituaries. Since March 11, the Deseret Morning News has counted at least five cases of teenagers or young adults dying from suspected drug overdoses. Four of those incidents happened during a three-week period beginning in mid-June: Zachary Tyler Martinez, 18, died of a drug overdose March 11. A 19-year-old Cottonwood Heights resident was found dead June 15. Deputies found the man on his bed. On his night stand they found "a small wad of paper with a black gooey-looking substance in it" and "a syringe with blood on the needle" in the night stand drawer, according to a Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office report. A 17-year-old South Salt Lake girl was found dead of an apparent drug overdose June 26 while working at a veterinary clinic. An autopsy report was still pending. Amelia Anne Sorich, 18, died June 27 after allegedly taking a fatal dose of cocaine and heroin, also known as a speedball. A 17-year-old Salt Lake City boy died in early July. Police could not comment on the case because it involved a juvenile. The boy's obituary, however, requested donations be made to www.theantidrug.com, a Web site designed to help parents talk to their children about drug use. "We're starting to see a younger crowd starting to experiment with hard-core drugs than what we're used to," Salt Lake City police Sgt. Ryan Atack said. "It's disturbing. People would be surprised how bad of a drug problem we have." Utah County Clientele Investigators say drug dealers and runners from Mexico are transporting heroin to Utah and specifically targeting juveniles. Once in Salt Lake County, detectives said, the dealers typically set up shop in the parking lots of local stores in broad daylight. Because Taylorsville is in the middle of Salt Lake County and has major roads leading in and out from every direction, Stephens said many dealers stop in his area to do business. As Taylorsville detectives became aware of the parking lot drug deals and began investigating them more, they discovered a lot of the cars they were monitoring had license plates registered to Utah County residents. "We started investigating a couple of months ago. We really had no idea how big it was. We started finding these kids waiting in parking lots in the middle of the day, meet someone who would then take them into neighborhoods and sell to them," he said. "We are seeing an unbelievable amount of Utah County kids." Police were eventually tipped off to what was happening by alert residents who were getting tired of seeing drug deals going down on their street. Utah County has had a long-standing problem with heroin addiction among teens. In 2003, the Deseret News ran a special report of how heroin was affecting the quiet town of Springville. Heroin has surfaced as a drug of choice among teens partly because of economics, authorities said. The two main drugs of concern for law enforcement among juveniles today are OxyContin, a potent painkiller, and heroin. Narcotics officers across Salt Lake County agree young people are getting hooked on the powerful painkillers and then progressing to other drugs such as heroin. "Once they get done taking the pills then they have to find a way getting the high again," Hudson said. And heroin is a cheaper alternative. While OxyContin may be sold for an average of $40 per pill on the street, Stephens said, a balloon of cocaine or heroin, the typical package used for distribution, only costs about $10. Teen Snitches Utah State Medical Examiner Dr. Todd Grey said he hadn't crunched the numbers, but anecdotally heroin overdoses have not risen to the level of concern as fatal OxyContin overdoses. "The big problem is prescription narcotics. . . . Those drugs are outpacing illicit drug overdoses two to three to one," he said. Atack, head of Salt Lake City's narcotics unit, said his office responded to more Oxycontin related deaths in 2004 than fatal heroin overdoses. Police say one possible reason for the recent spike in fatal overdoses is that there is no content quality control with heroin, compared to prescription drugs. "You can't tell its purity by looking at it," said Salt Lake County sheriff's Lt. Robbie Russo. Young teens who haven't built up a tolerance for heroin and may be using it for the first time can't tell the potency of a batch. And for those teens who survive, the cost of their addiction can add up. "It's an expensive hobby," Atack said. "They usually have to come up with the money some way." In an attempt to combat the apparent growing problem of teenage heroin use, Hudson said the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office is considering a tactic being used by some police departments in the eastern United States. Those departments have been using grant and forfeiture money to pay off informants in the schools. Essentially police are paying students to snitch on their friends, he said. Tell Someone Some parents say a tip from a friend could have saved their children. News coverage of the recent deaths of Amelia Sorich and Zachary Martinez has highlighted the growing heroin problem. Their cases became known not because they died of overdoses, but because of what happened to them after their deaths. Both of their bodies were dumped in remote areas by their panicked friends. Sorich's body was dumped in the foothills of Bountiful after she died from an apparent drug overdose June 27 while partying with friends in Draper. A 19-year-old male and an 18-year-old female were arrested for investigation of desecration of a dead body and evidence tampering. Martinez died of a suspected drug overdose March 11 while partying with friends. His body was dumped at the Salt Lake County Hang-Gliding Park at the Point of the Mountain. The two fit today's profile of a young heroin user. Sorich was an honors student who graduated early from Bingham High School. She was working two jobs at the time of her death to raise money for college. Martinez was also a straight-A student who graduated early, held a job and passed a routine drug test for his job just before his death, according to his mother, Georgia Martinez. Kathy Sorich, Amelia's mother, said her daughter had never used heroin before and she wasn't ready to say for sure that that was the cause of death. She said she would wait until toxicology tests are completed. A week before Martinez died, he was taken to the hospital for stomach problems. His mother said he also seemed to be acting "confused" much of the time. But drug tests at the hospital came back negative, she said. "We had no signs," she said. "Nobody picked up on anything going on." Both mothers say what bothers them most is that none of their children's friends called them. "You need to call an adult who can step in and do something," Sorich said. "You're not doing your friends any favors by being quiet." Atack added that overdose patients have a much greater chance of surviving if someone would simply call 911 or an adult. "(Kids) don't understand heroin overdose victims, if caught in time, can be revived fairly easily," Atack said. Georgia Martinez said when her son overdosed, there were adults upstairs in the same house who could have been alerted. "Parents have to be aware when kids have friends come over. Be aware of what's happening," Martinez cautioned other adults. She said her reason for speaking out now is to prevent another Zachary or Amelia incident from happening. "If Zack's life can even save one person," she said, "he would have been proud of us for doing this interview." - ---