The man responsible for more than two dozen heroin overdoses -- which all occurred in one day in a state deemed the ground zero for the opioid epidemic -- faces up to 20 years in federal prison. Bruce Lamar Griggs, 22, pleaded guilty on Monday to distribution of heroin, about six months after 26 people overdosed in Huntington, a city in the southwest corner of West Virginia. The 911 calls came within hours of one another, the majority of which concerned overdoses in and around one apartment complex. [continues 388 words]
HUNTINGTON - Around 3:30 p.m. Monday, reports of overdoses started pouring into Cabell County 911 Dispatch. By 9 p.m., 26 overdoses had been reported, more than Cabell County EMS responds to in a week. Cabell County EMS Director Gordon Merry said all the victims had been revived using naloxone; however, the heroin they had used was laced with a substance so strong, it sometimes took more than one dose of the opioid overdose-reversing drug to revive them. "I know it will be too late when this is printed," Merry said, "but if you have heroin please see what is going on and don't use it. It could be your last time. People aren't familiar with what it is cut with and right now we don't know what it's been cut with." [continues 413 words]
Our government doesn't care enough about protecting Americans from terrorism. If government officials cared, they would end the drug war and focus instead on ISIS. Imagine our country without a drug war. I see a country with $40 billion extra per year to fight terror. I see a country that focuses all its current drug war might, which is used to arrest hundreds of thousands of Americans every year, with literally no reduction in drugs, on breaking up ISIS. I don't mean that we keep bombing them only. When we bomb, we may kill terrorists, but we also kill civilians, and those civilians have family and friends who join the terrorists in vengeance against us. I do not want us to back down at all. I want us to dedicate a massive amount of resources toward creating more professionals like Ali Soufan. He was an FBI agent who spoke fluent Arabic and he was able to flip many Al Qaeda terrorists to work for our side to break up terror networks. [continues 126 words]
In light of local pain clinic doctors facing drug charges, one local addiction treatment specialist and psychiatrist believes removing cash dealings from the system is key to eliminating the drug epidemic. Dr. M. Khalid Hasan said greed on the part of physicians, pharmacists and patients - manifested in cash dealings - is at the root of the prescription opiate scourge. Hasan explained that patients to Raleigh Psychiatric Services, an addiction treatment clinic where patients can receive non-addictive drug treatment, have shared their experience at other area clinics. [continues 483 words]
There are nearly 2,000 people in the Mountain State living with HIV/AIDS. Statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources showed, back in April, the state has the highest rates of Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C cases in the country. In 2012, the Hep C rate was reported at 3.1 cases per 100,000 people, compared with 0.7 cases per 100,000 nationally. In 2013, Hep B rates were reported at 10.6 per 100,000 people, compared with the national rate of 0.9 cases per 100,000 people. [continues 1063 words]
CHARLESTON, W.VA. (AP) - West Virginia has the highest rate of overdose deaths in the U.S., according to a report released Wednesday, further spotlighting Appalachia's festering drug abuse problem, which is also fueling a rise in hepatitis C in one of the nation's poorest regions. There were about 34 drug overdose deaths per 100,000 West Virginia residents in 2011-13, up dramatically from 22 deaths per 100,000 people in 200709, according to the report released Wednesday by the nonprofit groups Trust for America's Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. [continues 525 words]
WHEELING - An HIV epidemic in southeastern Indiana is forcing the governor of that state to introduce a needle exchange program, something one local advocate believes could help decrease rates of the disease everywhere. The hike in HIV cases in Indiana is being linked to intravenous drug users sharing needles. Locally, residents across the Ohio Valley are battling heroin addiction, and their neighbors are often left cleaning up the mess - including picking up used needles left behind on playgrounds, in parks and on roadways. [continues 502 words]
A national organization that has raised $8 million over two years to fight substance abuse is urging West Virginia legislators to pass two laws designed to reduce drug overdose deaths. Shatterproof, a nonprofit headquartered in Connecticut, supports a "Good Samaritan" law that would give immunity to people who call 911 to report a drug overdose. Another measure would expand the availability of a life-saving medicine called naloxone, which reverses the effects or heroin and prescription painkillers. West Virginia has the highest drug overdose death rate in the United States. [continues 565 words]
Most Americans realize that marijuana is less harmful than alcohol and tobacco - yet booze and cigarettes are lucrative legal products, while pot-puffers face jail. This contradiction makes no sense. The New York Times, America's flagship newspaper, finally has launched an all-out crusade for legalization of marijuana. It declared: "It took 13 years for the United States to come to its senses and end Prohibition, 13 years in which people kept drinking, otherwise law-abiding citizens became criminals and crime syndicates arose and flourished. It has been more than 40 years since Congress passed the current ban on marijuana, inflicting great harm on society just to prohibit a substance far less dangerous than alcohol." [continues 315 words]
Many Areas Make Peace With Pot, but Some Cops Ramping Up Arrests WEIRTON, W.Va. - Taped to the wall of pride inside the Hancock County drug task force's bare-bones office, a snapshot of eight marijuana plants draped over coat hangers serves as evidence of one more small triumph in the war on weed. That same image of a drug-filled closet is seared in Ryan Neeley's memory, but with a very different meaning. To Neeley, the photo is proof that in the same country where a town in Colorado features a marijuana vending machine, the same country with a president who said it is wrong for "only a select few" to be punished for smoking pot, possession of the drug can still be a life-altering experience, and not in a good way. [continues 2953 words]
WEIRTON, W. Va. - As marijuana use grows - the number of smokers jumped 20 percent between 2007 and 2010 - enforcement of laws against the drug is diminishing in most places. But there are exceptions. In West Virginia's northern panhandle, marijuana possession arrests soared by more than 2,000 percent in the first decade of this century. It was the biggest jump in arrest rate of any locality in the nation, although in a county of just 30,000 residents, that amounts to only a few dozen cases. [continues 251 words]
Steep Rise in Arrests Reveals Disparities in Legal Approach Weirton, W.VA. - Taped to the wall of pride inside the Hancock County drug task force's bare-bones office, a snapshot of eight marijuana plants draped over coat hangers serves as evidence of one more small triumph in the war on weed. That same image of a drug-filled closet is seared in Ryan Neeley's memory, but with a very different meaning. To Neeley, the photo is proof that in the same country where a town in Colorado features a marijuana vending machine, the same country with a president who said it is wrong for "only a select few" to be punished for smoking pot, possession of the drug can still be a life-altering experience, and not in a good way. [continues 2788 words]
Mingo County Schools Department of Student Services will be expanding the Random Drug Testing Program to the six middle schools beginning with the 2014-2015 school term. The Office of Student Services and Attendance has scheduled parent orientation sessions at each middle school to discuss the Mingo County Schools Student Drug Testing Policy 5530.01. The policy will cover students in grades sixth through eight participating in athletics, extra-curricular activities and opt-in participants. The Random Drug Testing Policy has been in effect during the 2013-2014 school term for the two high schools, Mingo Central Comprehensive and Tug Valley. At this time, no positive results have come from the testing. [continues 195 words]
Illegal drugs have become a deadly merry-go-round in West Virginia. Just when the authorities believe they are making a dent in one form of abuse, another one comes around to take its place. Sometimes the cycle repeats itself. Police and prosecutors seem to be having some success in cracking down on methamphetamine labs, synthetic drugs and prescription pill abuse. But some say that has resulted in more trafficking in heroin. Price seems to be a factor. In part because arrests of prescription painkiller pushers have made the law of supply and demand kick in, the pills have become more expensive in some places. Heroin actually is cheaper. [continues 311 words]
Already this year, 160 methamphetamine "labs" have been found in Harrison County, Sheriff Joe Myers reported this week. That amounts to more than one illegal drug manufacturing operation for every 100 people who live in the county. And for every meth lab law enforcement officers find, there may be four to 10 others escaping detection, Myers added. As a description of a problem that ought to worry the public, the word "epidemic" probably is overused. Not in this situation. Illegal drugs have become an epidemic in Ohio. [continues 290 words]
Already this year, 160 methamphetamine "labs" have been found in Harrison County, Sheriff Joe Myers reported this week. That amounts to more than one illegal drug manufacturing operation for every 100 people who live in the county. And for every meth lab law enforcement officers find, there may be four to 10 others escaping detection, Myers added. As a description of a problem that ought to worry the public, the word "epidemic" probably is overused. Not in this situation. Illegal drugs have become an epidemic in Ohio. [continues 291 words]
The number of heroin overdose deaths in West Virginia tripled between 2007 and 2012 from 22 to 67, according to the latest figures from the West Virginia Health Statistics Center. During that same five-year period, the number of fatalities caused by prescription pain pills declined for the first time in five years. Those who monitor these statistics say more West Virginia residents, just like those in surrounding states, have turned to heroin because it is not only cheaper but also often more potent than prescription painkillers. [continues 762 words]
The nation's growing movement to legalize marijuana for medical or recreational use is no doubt sending the message to many that the substance is harmless. But that would be an incorrect assumption, according to a growing body of research that suggests use of marijuana can damage brains, particularly those of youth and young adults. A study released this week found that using marijuana a few times a week can alter brain structures in a way that could pose risks to the casual user. "Just casual use appears to create changes in the brain in areas you don't want to change," Hans Breiter, a psychiatrist and mathematician at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, told The Associated Press. Breiter led the study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers at Harvard University. [continues 381 words]
CVS Pharmacy sales of a cold medication that's also used to manufacture illegal methamphetamine have doubled over the past year in West Virginia, according to a Charleston Gazette analysis of sales data released last week. CVS stores are now West Virginia's No. 1 seller of pseudoephedrine, a key meth-making ingredient sold under brand names such as Sudafed and Allegra-D. "CVS stores are really crowding the top of the list," said Mike Goff, a state Board of Pharmacy administrator and former State Police meth lab investigator. [continues 1002 words]
CHARLESTON, West Virginia - Some states, including West Virginia, are reporting a rise in heroin use as many addicts shift from more costly and harder-to-get prescription opiates to this cheaper alternative. A look at what's happening in West Virginia: West Virginia's prescription opiate addicts are following a national trend as they shift to heroin, said Kenny Burner of the state Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. Burner said the numbers of seizures and overdoses have been steadily increasing over the past three to five years. Burner overseas drug task forces in major northern cities in West Virginia, where heroin comes straight into Appalachia through Detroit, Columbus, Chicago and Pittsburgh. [continues 260 words]