Pubdate: Mon, 06 Feb 2006 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2006 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: David Heinzmann and Tonya Maxwell, Tribune staff reporters Note: Tribune staff reporter Josh Noel contributed to this report Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) HEROIN ODS IN OVERDRIVE Potent Batch Suspected In Deaths Near South Side Public Housing An unusual rise in drug overdose deaths near a public housing complex on Chicago's South Side has police investigating heroin in the area to determine if a particularly lethal batch is being sold there. While toxicology tests from about half a dozen autopsies are done, narcotics officers will focus on drug busts near Dearborn Homes, Deputy Supt. Charles Williams said. "We'll be analyzing what we're seizing in there from now on too," Williams said Sunday. Narcotics investigators conducted a major undercover drug conspiracy bust in Dearborn Homes in the last couple of months, Williams said, and it is "more than likely" that whoever has attempted take control of the turf after those arrests is responsible for selling the questionable drugs. Police did not know if the drug was strong or had been mixed with another potent substance. At Dearborn Homes, a complex of mostly six-story apartment buildings at South State and 27th Streets, residents said word of the potent heroin began circulating over the weekend. Along a two-block stretch of State, police cameras are mounted atop light poles and a hospital advertisement painted on a bench at mid-block asks, "Are you addicted?" Dan Bigg, director of the Chicago Recovery Alliance, said drug users began talking last week about some strong heroin available on that stretch of State, known as a busy heroin corridor, particularly for people from the southwest suburbs. Two of the program's participants are believed to be among the dead, he said. Andrew Hyde, an alliance outreach worker, said manufacturers and dealers routinely cut the drug before it hits the streets, which can be a problem when the drug is mixed with a particularly strong substance. "It's a case of the heroin being too good, too pure, too strong," Hyde said. "They're thinking they're using less." The overdoses become even more dangerous, he said, because they often attract more customers to the area rather than scare them away. "It usually piques interest," Hyde said. "It makes them want to go out and get the dope because it's stronger. It's a messed up mentality." DePaul University sociology professor Greg Scott said Sunday a man who hosts heroin addicts in his home told him he had seen five people overdose last week on heroin bought in the area, including one person twice. All overdosed in a four-hour stretch but were revived with naloxone, a liquid that reverses the fatal effects of opiate drugs, said Scott, who studies transmission of viral disease among injection drug users. "They didn't know it was that potent," he said. "They had no idea what they were getting themselves into." Cindy Serpliss of Galena believes her son fell victim to a toxic batch of heroin after driving 160 miles to buy it. On Jan. 25, Josh Serpliss, 21, was found dead in the passenger seat of a car parked in Maywood, along the Eisenhower Expressway. His friend, Justin Jobgen, 23, sat in the driver's seat, still clutching the syringe that also led to his death. Maywood police immediately suspected a lethal batch of heroin, the parents of both men said. Officials there could not be reached Sunday to comment if that case might be linked to the Dearborn Homes deaths. Josh Serpliss began using heroin about a year ago, and last year his family sat by his side for three days, helping him through the violent reactions of getting clean, and supported him as he went through rehab in November. "We helped him through detox ourselves. It was some of the most satanic systems you've ever seen a person go through," said Cindy Serpliss of her older son. "He was so proud of the days he had been clean." The Serpliss family talked with Josh about heroin's potent allure. He knew that if he slid back, his body couldn't withstand the doses he once needed for the high, his mother said. She said she is comforted to learn from a medical examiner that his arms were unmarred by the telltale needle scars of heroin addiction. He had one small puncture wound, she was told. Randy Jobgen, also of Galena, had been checking his own son's arms. But Justin Jobgen was clean for about two months. The young man was a promising chef for an upscale pizzeria. Work was the only thing that dulled the need for heroin. "He told me, when you go to bed, you dream about it. When you wake up, you wish you had it. You forget about it for a while when you go to work. Then you go to bed and it starts all over again," his father said. Police told the father that the parking lot at 1st Avenue and I-55 is popular with drug users as they leave Chicago. "They get it, and pull into this because it's a real quick on and off. They do it there, they come down a little bit and drive off." Both families live in Galena, a western Illinois tourist destination and town of 3,500. "My fear is kids will see this and say it won't happen to me," Ron Serpliss said. "It's the same thing as saying, 'I won't get addicted.' But it grabbed Josh by the throat. It was just the most incredible thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman