Source: Daily Record, The (NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Copyright: 1998 Gannett Satellite Information Network Inc. Pubdate: 27 Sep 1998 Author: Erik Engquist and Robert Ratish Daily Record Note: Item number 2 of 26 in the series "Heroin: A Clear and Present Danger" NO NEEDLES. NO FEAR. JUST DESPAIR AND DEATH Killer drug storms the suburbs [PHOTO CAPTION] Elena, 18, is at Daytop Village in Mendham Township, trying to kick a $100-a-day heroin addiction. `Parents in Morris County like to pretend that heroin is still a drug for the middle-aged male laying on the streets of Newark or New York. It's not,' said the Rev. Joseph H. Hennen, the drug treatment center's executive director. Photo by Chris Pedota Today, someone in Colombia is swallowing more than $100,000 worth of heroin, hermetically sealed in 75 condoms. He will fly into Newark and walk casually through customs, his illicit cargo concealed in his intestines. Once expelled from his bowels, the heroin will be processed, transported and sold, some of it to a Morris County 17-year-old whose mother forgot to hide her car keys that day. To cover his costs, the teen addict will sell some of his score to eager freshmen and sophomores at his high school. The youths will secrete their small, odorless $10 bags of heroin into their backpacks and jeans pockets, retreat to their rooms, whip out a short straw and snort away. No needles. No veins. No blood. No fear. Because they are not shooting up, they do not consider themselves junkies. But the powder is powerful enough to kill -- and as many as 16 times this year in Morris County, it has. Heroin has stormed into suburban New Jersey and is leaving a trail of bodies in its wake. The 16 fatal overdoses -- up from three in all of 1992 - -- represent a fraction of those who continue to snort, smoke and inject the drug regularly here. "Parents in Morris County like to pretend that heroin is still a drug for the middle-aged male laying on the streets of Newark or New York. It's not," said the Rev. Joseph H. Hennen, executive director of Daytop Village drug treatment center in Mendham Township. "It's here." "The more realistic profile (of a heroin user)," said Kieran Ayre, clinical director of the High Focus Center in Sparta, "is a 16- to 18-year-old white male or female from a middle-to upper-class environment, who is a B or C student." Others say heroin is so pervasive that users cannot be generalized. "It's rich and poor, single-parent families and two-parent families. It's everyone," said Denville Patrolman Mark Boyer, who said local use of the drug has "skyrocketed" in his three years with the department. Duane Carmody of Hopatcong, at 20 already a veteran of the Morris County drug scene, said heroin has supplanted marijuana as today's drug of choice. "It's impossible to find someone selling pot. But if you walk three blocks down, you can get heroin," he said from the county jail where he was being held on drug charges. "There's so much heroin around, it's unbelievable. It's all over the place." So are its victims. As young as 17 and as old as 42, strapping student-athletes and withered junkies alike, 1998s heroin victims fit no typical profile: * Rockaway Township's Sean Haubrich, 17, was doted on as a child and was considered a "yuppie in training" by his friends and family. * John Wayne Healy of Parsippany was a 20-year-old high school dropout from a broken home who dreamed of forging a family with his ex-girlfriend and their daughter. * Margaret Ann "Peggy" Gardner of Jefferson was a quiet, unassuming 25-year-old with no local police record who overdosed three weeks before she was to be married. * Deborah Ann Koepke, 42, of Parsippany was a divorced mother of two who had led a troubled existence and had lost her zest for life. Whatever the differences in their backgrounds and personalities, the 16 Morris County victims shared a weakness for a drug that -- for a few hours, anyway -- wipes the mind free of worry. Their deaths reveal heroin's unprecedented penetration into this neck of suburbia. Its initial affordability, coupled with an increase in purity that allows users to get high without injecting it, has made heroin more attractive and dangerous. Twenty years ago, 30 percent pure heroin was high-end, according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. It wasn't until 1990 that Colombian drug lords introduced a significantly purer heroin to steal customers from the Asian, African and European suppliers. Snorting became the most prevalent means of heroin use in Newark, in part because heroin injectors were contracting HIV through shared needles. The Colombians, seeing higher profit and lower risk in heroin than cocaine, took over and expanded the drug's market. They moved heroin through their well-oiled northeastern cocaine trafficking network, reaping the rewards of a drug that, by weight, sells for four times as much as cocaine. Heroin's purity, just 39 percent nationwide, surged to 72 percent in New York City, and bags above 80 percent are not uncommon in New Jersey, according to the DEA. That purity, even though it has led to fatal overdoses, has done anything but scare addicts straight. Users looking for ever-stronger heroin are known to seek out the "brand" that recently killed someone. Dealers accordingly give their heroin such ominous labels as Born to Kill, 911 and The Grim Reaper. Simple economics have made heroin affordable, at least initially, to children: As the Colombians increased the supply of heroin, its price came down. A $10 bag (about a tenth of a gram) is enough to get a beginning user high. That has helped bring the average age of first use down from 27.3 in 1988 to 19.3 in 1995, and quadrupled the rate of first use among 12- to 17-year-olds over that period. Countless statistics bear out heroin's rise, both nationally and locally. A sampling: * Nationwide, 325,000 people reported using heroin within the past month in a 1996 survey, up from 68,000 in 1993. * Authorities seized 49 kilograms of heroin in New Jersey last year, up from 13.5 in 1996, and are on pace to seize 55 kilograms (121 pounds) this year. * The percentage of heroin-related admissions to substance abuse treatment programs in Morris County rose from 16 percent in 1994 to 24 percent in 1996. Daytop is treating 15 patients for heroin addiction, up from two in 1992. * Heroin-related emergency room episodes nationwide rose from 33,052 in 1990 to 74,714 in 1995. Simply put, heroin today is easy to smuggle, buy, conceal and use. And before long, addicts say, it's hard as hell to do without. "That craving literally overcomes everything," said Henry, a Morris County heroin user for most of his 50 years, who asked that his last name be withheld. "The first time I used heroin, I lost every word in my vocabulary except wow," said Henry. "Wow kind of sums the whole thing up. It's just an incredible feeling." Heroin is processed from morphine, which is extracted from poppy plants. Invented a century ago by aspirin-maker Bayer in an ill-fated effort to cure the morphine addictions of Civil War veterans, heroin rushes through the bloodstream to receptors in the brain, slowing down the body's systems and obliterating all emotional and physical pain with a satisfying calm. The opposite extreme is the horror of withdrawal -- vomiting, stomach cramps, diarrhea, body aches, insomnia and sweating. "It's an awful combination of psychological distress and physical problems," said Dr. Neal Schofield, psychiatrist and director of the chemical dependency program at St. Clare's Hospital/Boonton Township. "Some people get real sick when they don't do it," said Carmody. "They don't realize they're (so addicted) until they get sick. And you stay sick for like a week, two weeks. That's why they go back to it." "It's a little bit like a virus. It gets into everything," said Schofield. "That's why going off it is like being pulled apart." Inveterate users are unmistakable. "The living dead" is how Patrolman Boyer describes them. "Hygiene just goes out the window," the officer said. "They're unwashed, they smell, their life literally revolves around that fix." Often they lose weight as heroin becomes their food. But short of the hard-core junkie stage, heroin users are difficult to detect. "Heroin is a very insidious drug," said Gregg Benson, chemical dependency program administrator St. Clare's Hospital/Denville. "Parents may not see any major changes." Boyer recalled one 19-year-old whose heroin habit grew to 18 bags a day. "His parents for a long time were clueless," he said. "The only reason he's alive is he's in and out of jail so much." It might be two years into a teen's addiction before his parent realizes, Hennen said. "By the time you spot weight loss, it's far down the road and your kid is gone." Heroin addiction is progressive: over time, it requires more and more of the drug to achieve the same high. Snorters and smokers may graduate to injecting the drug, which gets it into the bloodstream in seconds rather than minutes, but eventually they find themselves taking heroin to avoid withdrawal rather than to get high. Death can come with any hit. An overdose occurs when the heroin slows the body so much that not enough oxygen reaches the brain, causing fatal or permanent damage. In 1995, the last year for which statistics are available, heroin-related emergency room visits jumped to 74,715 nationwide, up from 33,052 in 1990. Yet the danger seems lost on many Morris County parents. "The biggest area we struggle with is parental denial," said Ayre, the rehab clinic director. "They don't want to believe it's their child that's involved." Boyer said parents are often ungrateful after he's arrested their heroin-using children. "You're picking on my kid!" they tell him. "That gets frustrating," said Boyer, "because I know that kid doesn't stand a chance." One father, upon being told by school officials that his daughter might have a drug problem, "wanted us to keep it quiet because he thought it would hurt her chances to get into a good college," Morris County Prosecutor John B. Dangler said. A half dozen Madison School District parents complained when their children were required to attend a forum hosted by Dangler, in which recovering addicts at Daytop warn of heroin's dangers. One real estate agent even chastised the superintendent for "single-handedly lowering the property values in Madison" because the forum made it appear heroin had reached Madison. News flash: it has. Ayre gives in-school talks on drug awareness and sometimes asks teachers to leave the room so students can speak candidly. "I'll say, `Answer me honestly: If I were a new student and I had $20 in my pocket, how easy would it be to get drugs in this high school?' And kids raise their hands and say, `Give me 15 minutes.' I ask them about heroin, and they say, `Give me a couple of days.'" Buying heroin often involves a drive out of the county, where it can be less than $10 per bag (it's $18-$20 here) and more likely to be real. Over two hours on a recent Monday night, police watched as three dozen motorists bought heroin and crack on a Paterson street corner. They arrested eight of them, including two 17-year-old boys from Montville (one a doctor's son) and a 22-year-old whose parents had moved him from Dover to Pennsylvania to get him away from drugs. That's why some parents have taken to hiding their car keys. Ray Rusak of Chatham, who knew his son Steve had a drug problem, last May 18 hid his keys but forgot about the spare set. Steve found it, scored some heroin, overdosed and died in a Union County parking lot. But hidden keys are at most an inconvenience for heroin addicts. "A lot of them go to New York City," said Boyer. "They hop on the train, they're there and back in an hour or two, and their parents never know it." "An addict will find drugs in Alaska," said ex-heroin user Matthew Dougherty, 24, formerly of Morris Plains. Dougherty found his in New York City. After two years of heroin use, on July 23, 1994, he overdosed on a brand called Satan and barely survived. Today he uses a wheelchair and lives in a group home for brain-injured people in Hawthorne. "You can't tell an addict to stop. They have to find out for themselves," he said. "I thought I was invincible." So, perhaps, did Eric Mickens. After all, he had been a star running back for Butler High School's 1994 state champion football team despite smoking marijuana throughout his teens. In late 1997, he admitted to his mother that he had tried heroin but said it had made him sick and he wouldn't touch it again. Mickens made the same promise to his former step-father, a recovering heroin addict who warned him that using the drug would ruin his life or kill him. It did the latter, on April 24, in his own bed. Today's dangerously pure heroin makes no exceptions for star athletes or longtime users. Ten of the 13 fatal overdose victims in Morris County last year were over 30, as were eight of the 16 this year. Many had spent time in rehabilitation programs, but the relapse rate for heroin patients is high. Dougherty's mother, Dolly, said she "had a clue" he was using drugs, but never suspected heroin. A visit to his room after the overdose proved revealing. "There were bugs," said Dougherty. "I used beer cans as urinals so I wouldn't have to get up. And there were buckets of vomit." But as Benson said, warning signs aren't always apparent. Joseph Vincent Loia of Morris Plains, for example, was known as a good kid from a good family in a good neighborhood. The former altar boy was a poet, a musician, a cook, a painter, an avid reader. "He was not a junkie," his mother, Anna Ciavattone Loia, said nearly six months after her 24-year-old son was killed in January by a combination of heroin and a barbiturate. "He gave us no reason to suspect anything.... Sometimes I thought I was so lucky to have a son like that." >From local police to federal agencies, authorities are trying to curb heroin's spread. Drug arrests are up 25.5 percent statewide and 66.5 percent in Morris County this decade. New Jersey authorities seized more heroin in 1997 than in the three previous years combined. More beds in drug treatment centers are going to heroin addicts. Dangler continues to sponsor anti-drug forums at local schools. And on Oct. 5, a by-invitation-only "Focus on Heroin Summit" hosted by Daytop is expected to attract Gov. Christine Todd Whitman and experts from across the country to talk about the heroin problem in Morris, Sussex and Warren counties. The experts and elected officials will convene at the Parsippany Hilton to advance their search for solutions. But only one guaranteed cure for heroin addiction has yet been found. Sixteen grieving families in Morris County could tell you about it. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski