Pubdate: Wed, 17 Aug 2005 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2005 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Rocco Parascandola, Staff writer Note: Staff writer Luis Perez contributed to this story Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) IT SMACKS OF DEATH Six Fatalities In Six Days Lead Authorities To Believe A Batch Of Killer Heroin Is On The Streets In The City, And They Move To End The Destruction A super-potent or tainted batch of heroin may have killed six people in the city recently, authorities said yesterday, and they issued a citywide alert while police tried to locate the source of the killer drug. At the same time, health officials braced for an anticipated rush by addicts looking for a more intense high, as was the case in 1991 when 12 addicts died and 100 others were poisoned in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut after using heroin spiked with fentanyl, a powerful anesthetic. The alert, announced by Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Department of Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden, followed the Monday night discovery of Anatoli Flistovich, 42, in Manhattan Mini-Storage on Spring Street and several days of blaring headlines about two young women found in an apartment where they had partied with two older men. The six deaths over the course of six days in a city where 900 drug users die yearly of overdoses was termed a "cluster" by Kelly because they occurred in a concentrated area of Manhattan. Although dealers will often sell heroin under a name such as the title of a movie, police did not find telltale packaging at each death scene, and toxicology tests to determine cause of death are pending. Kelly said the alert was necessary because "there's a possibility adulterated heroin was a factor in each." "This is an ongoing investigation, and we are awaiting further results, but in this case, I don't believe there is such a thing as exercising too much caution." Authorities in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Rockland County, meanwhile, are investigating 10 or so other overdose cases and talking with city police about the possibility there is a connection, as out-of-state dealers often purchase their heroin in the city. City police were also hoping to glean clues from a heroin seizure yesterday in the Bronx. At station houses and police facilities across the city, officers were briefed. Some were sent to drug-treatment facilities, others to residential areas, and they were told to spread the word about the heroin. NYPD vans were dispatched to areas where heroin use is a problem, and warnings about the killer drug blared over loudspeakers. Narcotics officers and Health Department workers, meanwhile, were pressing informants for anything they may have heard about the source of the heroin. Frieden said the alert activated his agency's existing protocol, with workers in close contact with emergency rooms, methadone clinics and needle-exchange workers. The first suspicious death happened Aug. 10 when Kristopher Korkowski, 24, a hairdresser, was found dead in his Avenue B apartment. Two days later, Ivan Rivera, also 24, died on the roof of an East Seventh Street building. The same day, Mellie Carballo and Maria Pesantez, both 18, were found unconscious in an East Houston Street apartment. Carballo, a Hunter College freshman studying psychology, died 20 minutes later. Pesantez, a New York University sophomore majoring in computer science, died in her mother's arms the next day. That same day, Charles Siker, 37, was found slumped over in a portable toilet at Pier 54 near West 54th Street. Kelly and Frieden acknowledged the alert would likely catch the attention of those heroin users who seek out the most intense high possible - no matter what the cost. Frieden said his agency would rely on its "network of contacts to get the word out that these are drugs that can kill you." Kelly, meanwhile, said police would focus on preventing street sales. "We're certainly going to have increased enforcement activity in the areas where these deaths have taken place," he said. Anyone with information about the six deaths or the source of the heroin is asked to call police at 800-577-TIPS. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth