Pubdate: Sun, 29 Mar 2015 Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2015 Sarasota Herald-Tribune Contact: http://www.heraldtribune.com/sendletter Website: http://www.heraldtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/398 Author: Elizabeth Johnson HEROIN DEATHS REVEAL GROWING FOE FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT SARASOTA COUNTY - The 27-year-old man was found dead on Feb. 24 inside a Walmart bathroom in East Bradenton. He had a history of heroin use. A small bag containing a white substance was recovered from the scene. A child called their uncle on Jan. 6 because their 30-year-old mother was unresponsive. When the uncle arrived, he found the woman dead with a needle in her arm. He placed the needle in a drawer so the children wouldn't see it. Crime scene technicians took the syringe as evidence. A 42-year-old man was released from jail on Jan. 11. The next day, his friend noticed he was lethargic and snoring loudly. He was found dead with a syringe, spoon and pill bottle containing three packages of heroin. These are the details of three of the 15 suspected overdose deaths reported in unincorporated Manatee County this year. Fifteen is an overwhelming number, especially in just a three-month period. In all of 2013, the 12th District Medical Examiner reported 19 heroin-related deaths in its tri-county area of Manatee, Sarasota and DeSoto. In 2012, that number was seven. Only two were reported in both 2010 and 2011. Detectives are responding to such scenes to find needles still in the arms of the deceased, but Lt. Darin Bankert of the Manatee County Sheriff's Office said he's seen that before. "It's more the volume than anything else," Bankert said. "We had a guy at the gas station, parked at the gas pumps who overdosed sitting in the driver's seat. That's not something I've seen in the past. It's the volume. Two or three a day used to be unheard of." But the incidents have tapered off this month. After 10 possible heroin overdoses were reported in February, none have been reported in March. Two have been reported this month by the Sarasota Police Department, which has had four suspected heroin overdoses this year. The Bradenton Police Department has had three this year, while the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office has recorded only two. Those 25 possible heroin overdoses across those four jurisdictions have not been confirmed. While they are suspected to be heroin-related because of the circumstances -- known history of heroin use or paraphernalia found at the scene -- toxicology reports that will shed more light on the deaths and confirm whether heroin played a fatal role are still pending at the Medical Examiner's Office. Deadly ingredient The disparity in numbers between bordering jurisdictions may have something to do with the ingredients of the heroin. As suspected heroin deaths rose in Manatee County this year, Bankert said detectives were puzzled. Then the friend of one victim said the woman had purchased "China White," the street name for fentanyl-laced heroin. "I thought we stumbled upon a revelation," Bankert said. Initial tests by chemists at the Manatee County Sheriff's Office found fentanyl -- an opioid used to treat severe chronic pain -- in heroin found at several overdose scenes. Bankert said a chemist working in Sarasota County told a Manatee County chemist that they're "not seeing the same fentanyl in their heroin." Fentanyl-laced heroin has taken off across the United States, with definite spikes noticed in the southwest and northeast. The Drug Enforcement Administration issued a nationwide alert on March 18 on the dangers of fentanyl. The Schedule II narcotic that is used as an analgesic and anesthetic is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and 30 to 50 times more potent than heroin. It's lethal, even in small doses, the DEA warns. "Fentanyl is particularly deadly," Bankert said. "It enhances the effects of the heroin. It's a cheap way to increase your product and it enhances the opiate." While authorities are still investigating how the particularly lethal drugs are infiltrating southwest Florida, Bankert said the assumption is that fentanyl is more accessible in Mexico and being brought across the border for distribution throughout the U.S. Pill users turn to heroin Another possible explanation for the increase in suspected heroin-related deaths? More, inexperienced users. While prescription pills haven't completely disappeared from from the drug overdose landscape, they have significantly decreased as the result of enforcement regulating access to prescription narcotics and shutting down pain clinics once called "pills mills." "We knew we were going to see heroin," Sarasota County Sheriff Tom Knight said. "The price of the pill went up, so it's cheaper to get heroin." Authorities used to see crack cocaine, then pills. Now, heroin is on the rise. "To me, it looks like we are getting more heroin users and probably people who wouldn't be using heroin if pills were still around," Bankert said. "Non-traditional heroin users are turning to heroin." It is possible that these users, who are unfamiliar with heroin, don't know the correct amounts to use to get a high but avoid death. The existence of more deadly heroin cut with fentanyl mixed with inexperienced users may explain the sudden increase. "You can't take the same amount as if it was just heroin or heroin cut with something else like baking soda or dramamine," Bankert said. Heroin, Knight said, is easier to control because it's illegal. "It's simple to arrest for heroin," Knight said. "We would come across people who were addicted, but they had a script so we couldn't do anything about it." To combat heroin, Knight said law enforcement agencies will need to track where heroin is being sold then transfer resources to shut it down. "We move personnel to those area to displace, interrupt or end the issues," said Maj. Paul Richard of the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office. Creative with pills While much focus is shifting to heroin, Knight said enforcement is still needed with prescription drugs. "We don't want people to believe prescription drugs aren't a problem anymore," Knight said. "We don't want a false sense of security. We're still combating the problem. We're not out of the woods." The ordinance, as well as the cooperation of doctors and pharmacies, have been significant in the decrease in pills, but they are still accessible. Richard, the sheriff's major, said people buy the medications online and go doctor shopping in other regions. "People are becoming more desperate," Knight said. "They're selling and trading pills, becoming creative. There's always somebody who will test the system." A Sarasota County woman was arrested earlier this year with prescription drug fraud after she allegedly got a prescription for Adderall from her daughter's doctor. Detectives learned that the woman had lost custody of her daughter, who did not receive the pills her mother received. When arrested, the woman reportedly told detectives that she sold the 30 Adderall pills for $7 each so she could buy roxicodone. The most surprising case, though, was that of Michael Cramer, an 18-year-old high school student who was caught allegedly selling drugs in a parking lot. Cramer was arrested Feb. 24. Deputies seized $4,300 in cash, 748 Alprazolam tablets, more than six pounds of marijuana and edibles containing THC, according to the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office. "He was unusual," Richard said. "We knew it was tracking into Sarasota High and Riverview High. He was catering to high school students with marijuana and pills." Knight called Cramer "advanced" with his "one-shop type of deal." While prescription pills occasionally pop up, Knight said it is not nearly the problem it was years ago when he regularly had parents crying in his office after their child overdosed on pills. Addicts are getting help through rehab, drug court and a recover pod at the jail. Metals thefts in which people would steal metal and sell it for drug money have significantly decreased. "We're not out of the woods on pain pills, even though they've been reduced," Knight said. "The landscape has leveled more than changed. We feel good about where we're at, but we don't want to go back. "You can't arrest your way out. This is a huge quality of life issue. We're keeping the pills were they belong and with the people who need them. "We can handle the heroin." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom