Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2006 Source: Ely Daily Times (NV) Copyright: 2006 Daily Times Contact: 297 11th St E Ely, NV 89301 Website: http://www.elynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2325 Author: Michael Tarm, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) AMID FENTANYL DEATHS, ADDICTS KEEP USING CHICAGO - A self-described drug addict stood by a vacant lot on the city's South Side and pointed down the block. There, he says, more than a dozen of his friends and acquaintances died after using heroin laced with a strong painkiller. Several miles away, police and drug enforcement officials ended two days of discussions on the possible source of the bad heroin that killed Howard's friends and at least 100 others from Chicago to Philadelphia. The summit that ended Thursday provided officials from 12 states and Washington, D.C., the chance to coordinate their investigations into the spike of fentanyl-related deaths since the beginning of this year, Ogden said at a news conference. He said that just 125 micrograms of the illegal fentanyl -- the equivalent of a few grains of salt -- are more than enough to kill. There were outbreaks of fentanyl-laced heroin in the '80s and early '90s, said Arlington, Va.-based DEA spokeswoman Mary Irene Cooper, who was in Chicago for the meeting. The difference is that the outbreaks aren't isolated this time to one city. Its deadliness doesn't appear to have dissuaded hardened drug addicts. "We have willing victims here," he said. "That's part of the problem." Howard said there is less fear among many addicts than non-addicts might presume. "Suicidal behavior comes from being an addict," agreed Francois Seets, a 58-year-old recovering addict from Chicago. "They think they're immortal. ... And they think it (the fentanyl contamination) will pass." "You wouldn't know it's bad until you collapse," he said. Howard, who said he struggles to scrape together the $10 it costs for a small bag of heroin, said he doesn't turn down free samples of heroin -- even though such samples have been linked to the recent fentanyl deaths. But he does take precautions. Before settling down to shoot up a sample with friends, "I let somebody else go first to be sure," Howard said. Seets said the fentanyl outbreak does serve as an inspiration to him, driving home the potentially deadly consequences of a relapse. "It makes me understand I am mortal," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman