Pubdate: Mon, 16 Aug 2010 Source: Burlington Times-News (NC) Copyright: 2010 Freedom Communications, Inc. Contact: http://www.thetimesnews.com/sections/contactus/letter.php Website: http://www.thetimesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1822 Author: Roselee Papandrea, Times-News HEROIN USE IS ON THE RISE Heroin use is on the rise in Burlington and authorities are concerned about its potential impact on the community. It's not that the drug is available on every street corner in the city. But it is creeping its way in and investigators in the Burlington Police Department's special operations division say the drug's potency is much higher than it was when it was popular among inner-city junkies injecting it in the 1970s. The typical user in this area is white, between 20 and 25 years old and from west Burlington, and pain killers that they find in mom and dad's medicine cabinet are often the gateway to their heroin addiction, said a Burlington police undercover drug officer who asked to remain anonymous because of ongoing investigations. "They are developing the habit on prescription pain killers," the undercover officer said. "When they can't get them any more, they move over to heroin." Brown powder heroin is also cheaper and it's potent so users no longer have to inject it, which is a turnoff to a lot of drug users, to get high. "The purity has gone up so much," the undercover officer said. "You can still get a good high by snorting." Heroin used to be considered a "dirty drug" because the way to get high was to inject it. Back in the 1970s, heroin was mostly filler and only about 5 percent pure. The only way to get that euphoric high was to inject it. The heroin available now is 50 to 80 percent pure, and users never know exactly what they are getting. Most of Burlington's heroin users are buying a hit of the drug, which is a bindle - a small, jewelry-size bag - for about $10 or $15. That's a lot cheaper than purchasing a prescription pain killer off the street. They run about $1 a milligram, which means one 60 milligram tablet of oxycotin could cost as much as $70. In June, Burlington police charged Jonathan David Lee, 38, of Lexington Avenue, Burlington with trafficking heroin, possession with intent to sell and deliver heroin, manufacturing a schedule I controlled substance, possession with intent to sell and deliver marijuana and maintaining a vehicle/dwelling for the sale of a controlled substance. He is in the Alamance County jail under $250,000 bond awaiting trial. From what police could tell during a six-month investigation that started in January, Lee was allegedly a major supplier of heroin to young people in west Burlington. It's not a drug that dealers just sell on a street corner. "If I want to get a rock of cocaine, I can get it within 20 minutes," said Burlington police Staff Sgt. B.R. Becmer, who heads the special operations division. "With heroin it's a different story. You have to know somebody." Locking up Lee, who authorities allege is the "heroin man of the city," did have an impact on the users, the undercover officer said. "That group of kids aren't able to get it anymore," the officer said. But it's just a matter of time before another dealer moves into the area. HEROIN IS highly addictive. "It creates a euphoria," the undercover officer said. "It gives you a warm fuzzy feeling that lasts a long time, and you don't care what happens." Users can do a hit at 5 p.m. and then go out or hangout for hours. When they go to bed at 4 a.m., many still have a buzz. But the after-effects of the drug are brutal, the undercover officer said. "They would wake up lying in a ball, vomiting and in pain," the officer said. Cocaine is a stimulant, and it's a quick buzz. There are a lot of recreational cocaine users who might use it on a Saturday night before going out to a bar. "It's rare to find a one-time heroin user or a recreational heroin user," the undercover officer said. "... They want to get it whenever they can and do it whenever they can do it." Users who snort it will begin injecting it once they are addicted. "They say, 'I'll do this. I'll snort this, but I'm not going to inject it. But once they get high and get addicted, all rules go out the door. When you inject it, it's a better high," the undercover officer said. With potency levels that range from 50 percent or higher, users never know how strong the hit will be, so the potential for overdosing without realizing it is also higher. "You don't know what the purity level is," Becmer said. "There is no way to regulate what you are putting in your body." Police say that educating the public, especially parents, about heroin and how the addiction starts is key to stopping the problem before it gets worse. "Be part of your children's lives," Becmer said. "Be mindful of changes and of seclusion." Police also warn that parents need to be wary about keeping prescription pain killers in a place where teens have access to them. "For us, we can clearly show a connection between heroin and prescription pills," the undercover officer said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D