Pubdate: Thu, 30 Apr 2015 Source: Record, The (Kitchener, CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Metroland Media Group Ltd. Contact: http://www.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 Author: Liz Monteiro Page: B2 COCAINE, METH REMAIN DRUGS OF CHOICE Fentanyl joining the deadly mix of prescription medication police are finding in abundance in region WATERLOO REGION - Cocaine, methamphetamine and a list of prescription drugs continue to be the drugs of choice among users and dealers in Waterloo Region. But another drug that has been causing havoc in bigger cities across the country is the potent opiate - fentanyl. Waterloo Regional Police say fentanyl is available locally and in one case a dealer was selling heroin laced with fentanyl. Fentanyl is prescribed as a painkiller, and the strong opioid is used by cancer patients. It has become a popular illicit drug. Street users chew or smoke pieces of the time-release patches. Det. Const. Louise Stemmler said a patch of fentanyl can be cut up into 100 squares, with a couple of squares selling for $10. It's difficult to know or control how much is ingested when the patch is cut up into pieces, she said. While some drugs such as heroin and cocaine come from source countries, methamphetamine can be made in a kitchen. Meth is often sold as crystal, looking like shards of glass. "You wouldn't eat a sandwich made at the place where they are making this stuff," Stemmler said. Stemmler said meth users love their high so much that they aren't motivated to quit the habit. "One user tells me she loves it. She is so trapped, she can't get out," she said. Police said they are seeing a new form of drug trafficking through social media. Stemmler said chat forums where discussions on drugs are held are popular. "They are experimenting with drugs and users are looking for a high that lasts longer," she said. Insp. Dave Bishop said police projects are effective in getting some dealers off the streets but there are always others ready to fill the gap. "You won't shut it down. It's a rotating door," he said. "But we can make it harder to get in the drug scene and make them paranoid." Last fall, officers participated in Project Zamboni, a crackdown on methamphetamine trafficking. For about two months, undercover police officers targeted street-level dealers pushing the highly addictive drug. Fourteen people were arrested and 65 charges laid. Police seized more than $10,000 worth of meth, cocaine, hydromorphone pills, oxycodone pills and marijuana. Hydromorphone is an opioid painkiller commonly known as Dilaudid, a prescription medication. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt