Pubdate: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 Source: Enterprise, The (MA) Copyright: 2007 The Enterprise Contact: http://enterprise.southofboston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3231 Author: Maureen Boyle, Enterprise staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) FAKE HEROIN EYED IN OD SPIKE A powerful synthetic drug linked to hundreds of deaths across the country has been sold on local streets by drug dealers as heroin and could be linked to a rash of overdoses, investigators say. The state lab told Brockton police recently that what they thought was heroin seized from a drug dealer last summer was actually fentanyl, a pain killer 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine. It was the first concrete evidence given to Brockton police that fentanyl was being sold in the city as heroin, said Sgt. Kevin O'Connell, head of the Brockton narcotics unit. "It was pure fentanyl," O'Connell said. Investigators have not been able to link the fentanyl sold as heroin to any recent overdose deaths, O'Connell said. "We feel this is related to a lot of the ODs, but we have not been able to connect it directly yet," he said. An examination of death certificates in 26 cities and towns in The Enterprise area found there were 13 deaths tied to fentanyl between Jan. 1, 2004, and Aug. 31, 2006. It was not known if in any of those cases the victims thought they were using heroin. In at least one case, a 24-year-old Raynham man died after chewing a time-release fentanyl patch to get high. Nationally, there were 8,000 emergency room visits due to overdoses of fentanyl or fentanyl combined with another drug in 2004. Authorities have been on the lookout for the drug locally for nearly a year. "We have had rumors from people -- and from various addicts that we interview -- that there have been certain individuals selling real strong stuff. We have been trying to learn if it was fentanyl," O'Connell said. "This is the first confirmation we have had." Hanover Police Chief Paul Hayes said there could be more fentanyl on the street but investigators aren't getting test results back soon enough. "We are pretty sure some of the drug overdose deaths are fentanyl but the toxicology reports are not coming back quick enough," said Hayes, a member of the Governor's Advisory Council on Alcoholism and Narcotic Abuse. The last toxicology report of an overdose death was from early 2006, making it difficult to link deaths to the drug, he said. "We still don't know what we are dealing with," Hayes said. The drugs seized by Brockton narcotics detectives was the second fentanyl seizure in the area. Hanover police seized what was purported to be heroin from two people running a drug delivery service last summer and later learned it was fentanyl, Hayes said. Joanne Peterson, founder of Learn to Cope (learn2cope.org), a support group for families of opiate addicts, said the finding came as no surprise. "Our group has our own tally and we have counted 13 (deaths) between Norfolk, Bristol and Plymouth County since October and two of them were 18 years old and most in their twenties. In my opinion, whether it's pure fentanyl or pure heroin, our youth is at more risk than people realize and something has to be done about this," she said. "Either drug is toxic and deadly and we need to get to the source on how it's so prevalent and where it's coming from." Peterson said action needs to be taken now to stop heroin use. "If we had a rash of deaths from peanut butter, it would be off the shelves immediately, and that is acting upon a risk. Why isn't anyone acting upon this deadly epidemic? Why aren't we getting warnings out to parents? These kids are getting younger and if there is a risk out there people need to hear about it," she said. The test results Brockton police recently received from the state were of drugs seized from a dealer in a shopping mall parking lot last summer. O'Connell said the suspect was seen selling the drugs to two Hanover residents, a 19-year-old woman and a 20-year-old man. "They get this stuff and they think it is real good heroin when in actuality it is fentanyl," O'Connell said. Fentanyl is darker than heroin normally sold on the street, he said. Fentanyl, first created in Belgium in the late 1950s and about 80 times more potent than morphine, began being used in the 1960s by doctors as an anesthetic. It is now used both as an anesthetic and a highly potent pain reliever. One brand of fentanyl by Actiq is used for pain relief for cancer patients. Drug dealers are also making fentanyl in clandestine labs in Mexico and elsewhere, then mixing it with heroin. More than 100 deaths have been reported in the country among drug addicts who overdosed on heroin mixed with fentanyl. That prompted the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration last May to issue an alert to substance abuse treatment and prevention professionals about the deadly combination of fentanyl and heroin or cocaine. The agency said the drug combination was believed to be tied to clusters of drug deaths and non-fatal overdoses across the country. In just one week in May, an estimated 33 people in Detroit died, according to the agency. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman