Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 Source: Bangor Daily News (ME) Copyright: 2006 Bangor Daily News Inc. Contact: http://www.bangornews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/40 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) DRUGS KILL MORE THAN CAR WRECKS State Officials Alarmed by Grisly '05 Statistics AUGUSTA - Grisly and somber statistics released by state officials Wednesday indicate that last year for the first time in modern Maine history, drug-related deaths outnumbered motor vehicle casualties. Preliminary figures show there were 178 drug-related deaths in Maine in 2005 while 168 people died in motor vehicle accidents in the state. As the grim statistics were revealed during a press conference, Gov. John Baldacci took aim at the Bush White House, saying it continued to turn its back on the suffering of Maine families. He noted that federal funding to the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency has been cut by 40 percent. With the state's drug problem continuing to spiral out of control, the cuts would decimate the agency charged with curtailing it, officials said. On Wednesday, Baldacci said he would propose $640,000 in new state money from the General Fund to make up for the federal cuts. Public Safety Commissioner Michael Cantara also blamed the federal government for "walking away" from its responsibility, citing that the drugs killing Mainers were federally regulated narcotics and were being trafficked across state lines, a federal offense. Maine Attorney General Steve Rowe called Washington's response to the drug problem "shameful." While there was a fair amount of politics involved in Wednesday's press conference, the bottom line was the staggering statistics. Of the 178 drug-related deaths, 140 were deemed accidental overdoses. In comparison, there were 19 accidental drug-related deaths in 1997. The average age of those who died was 40, and two-thirds were male. The 168 motor vehicle deaths were the lowest number in 23 years. OxyContin deaths have declined due to the state and national fight to curb the abuse of the narcotic. In 2005, 75 of the drug-related deaths were attributed to methadone, the drug most often used to treat opiate addiction. Methadone was the leading drug that killed in 2005, but often was used in combination with other drugs. Officials, however, were quick to point out that the majority of those who died from an overdose of methadone had ingested the pill form of the drug, prescribed by physicians for pain, rather than the liquid form distributed at drug-recovery clinics. Physicians have become cautious when prescribing OxyContin because of its potential for abuse, and have switched to drugs such as methadone and morphine for pain, Kim Johnson, director of the Office of Substance Abuse, said. "The drug of choice is still OxyContin, but it's not available," Johnson said. Hence, methadone and morphine deaths are on the rise. On Wednesday, Cantara pointed to several recent armed robberies linked to drug addiction and said the problem of drug abuse was bringing a new level of violence to the state. On display was a shotgun, two handguns and a grenade launcher seized recently from a sport utility vehicle that stopped in a park-and-ride lot in Sidney. Bags of cocaine and opiates also were found inside the vehicle. "We have experienced a sharp rise in the number of armed robberies in this state, and most of those can be directly linked to the growing drug problem in our state," Cantara said. Baldacci said he was profoundly troubled by the most recent statistics. "But as the problem worsens, federal assistance is falling. We are losing their [the federal government's] partnership, and Maine families are suffering," he said. If approved, the $640,000 will allow the Maine Attorney General's Office to retain its six prosecutors who focus solely on drug cases, as well as maintain MDEA's field agents. In fiscal year 2004-2005, the MDEA conducted 806 investigations and arrested 688 people. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake