Pubdate: Thu, 31 Aug 2006 Source: Eagle-Tribune, The (MA) Copyright: 2006 The Eagle-Tribune Contact: http://www.eagletribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/129 Author: Gordon Fraser Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. TWO CHARGED IN TEEN'S HEROIN DEATH BRENTWOOD - Caitlyn Brady's former boyfriend could face life in prison for providing the heroin that killed her and hiding the evidence, according to authorities. "It's malicious disregard for the consequences of drugs like heroin," said Jim Reams, the county attorney. Two men were arraigned yesterday on charges they were directly involved in a heroin overdose that, on March 15, killed Brady, 18, a former Sanborn Regional High School student. Two other local men, arrested at the same time on Tuesday, face secret indictments on "heroin-related" charges, Reams said. Those charges will be made public in the next few days, he said. Brady's boyfriend at the time, [Name redacted], 21, Newton, is charged with two felonies. Prosecutors said [Name redacted] dispensed the drug that killed Brady and then falsified the physical evidence by dumping a syringe and other drug paraphernalia in a Dumpster some distance from his house. Brady's mother said that just two days before Caitlyn's death her daughter shared plans to end her relationship with [Name redacted]. But, her mother said, the young woman was at her boyfriend's house the morning of March 15, a Wednesday. Caitlyn Brady had dropped out of school the November before. Brady's mother, Gayle Brady, said yesterday she thinks it was [Name redacted] who actually injected the needle into her daughter's arm. She said she saw track marks, an indication of intravenous drug use, on her daughter's left arm the day she died. The young woman was left-handed, her mother said, which indicated to her that someone else had injected her daughter with drugs. "That's my belief. Nobody else's belief but mine," she said. Prosecutors have not alleged that [Name redacted] - or anyone else - injected Brady with the drug. Whoever did - whether she did it herself, [Name redacted] did it or someone else - the heroin proved fatal. She was pronounced dead at Exeter Hospital a short time after taking the drug, although Reams said she died almost instantly after the needle was injected into her arm. Now, the men prosecutors say bought the heroin in Massachusetts, brought it to New Hampshire and ultimately gave it to Caitlyn Brady could face time in prison. One of those men - [Name redacted], 22, Kingston - was arraigned yesterday on a felony charge of dispensing a controlled drug, death resulting. Prosecutors said [Name redacted] drove [Name redacted] of Kingston - one of the men charged under secret indictment - to Massachusetts to buy the heroin that later killed Brady. Those secret indictments and an investigation leave unanswered questions about the state's version of what happened last March. Reams wouldn't say where in Massachusetts [Names redacted] went, or whom they bought the heroin from. He said the investigation continues and charges against others are possible in the coming days and weeks. It also isn't clear how a fourth man - identified by Reams as [Name redacted] of East Kingston - was involved. [Name redacted] was arrested late Tuesday afternoon with the others. He is being held in the Rockingham County jail and faces a "heroin-related" charge in a secret indictment, Reams said. [Name redacted] was taken yesterday from the jail to Exeter Hospital, according to Reams. "He complained about his health, so the jail transported him," Reams said, adding that [Name redacted] could be arraigned in his hospital bed. Superior Court Judge Patricia Coffey yesterday rejected pleas by defense attorneys for reduced bail, saying the men were young and face serious charges. She said they could prove a flight risk. Coffey set bail for [Name redacted] at $100,000 cash each. Both men are still being held at the Rockingham County jail. Reams said both could face life in prison, although prosecutors have not yet decided what penalties they'll ask for. "I think it's fair to say we'll pursue heavy sentences," he said. [Name redacted]'s lawyer, Philip Desfosses, asked the court to consider the facts alleged in the case, pointing out that no one has accused [Name redacted] of selling drugs or intending to harm Brady. "This isn't a case where the drugs were sold or anything else," he said. The prosecution is only alleging poor judgment, Desfosses said. [Name redacted]'s lawyer, Neil Reardon, yesterday argued that his 22-year-old client was "on the fringes" of the state's case, and he said the court should consider Brady's personal responsibility for her decision to take a serious drug. "I would suggest to the court that anyone who takes heroin is taking poison," he said. Reardon equated Brady's choice to take heroin to "suicide." But Gayle Brady said her daughter never took the drug before, and said she blames [Name redacted] for her daughter's involvement with the deadly narcotic. Four weeks before her death, Caitlyn Brady had gone to a doctor to receive treatment for eczema, according to her mother. Gayle Brady, who is a nurse, examined her daughter's arms then and saw no sign of intravenous drug use, she said. The young woman had experimented with other drugs and alcohol, her mother said, but Gayle Brady blames [Name redacted] for many of her daughter's problems and, ultimately, her death. Caitlyn Brady met [Name redacted] through a mutual friend three years ago, Gayle Brady said. "He was almost like - you ever watch 'Leave it to Beaver?' You know Eddie Haskell?" she said of [Name redacted]. "He was a sweet talker, even to me." She said she didn't know the other three men who were arrested with [Name redacted]. The circumstances of Caitlyn Brady's death have remained a mystery since March. Students at Sanborn Regional High School held a candlelight vigil remembering the young woman and other young people who had died this year. About two weeks before her death, Caitlyn Brady returned to the school to visit friends and faculty members. Principal Gail Sudduth remembered Brady sharing plans to go to cosmetology school. "We were really hoping that things were going well for her," Sudduth said shortly after the young woman's death. Gayle Brady said her daughter was enrolled in school at the time of her death. Now, the mother said, she's struggling to cope with her daughter's death. "What happened to Caitlyn can come on you at any minute of the day," she said. "I could be crying in my car just before I have to go in and see somebody." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman