In the list of horrors that a parent might ever experience, losing oneโs child because she unknowingly grabbed and drank a bottle of water laced with fentanyl has to be among the worst imaginable. And tragically, thatโs what happened to a North Carolina woman named Barb Walsh in 2021 when her daughter Sophia died almost instantly from fentanyl poisoning.
NORTH CAROLINA โ Some North Carolina families are waiting months, even a year, to find out how their loved one died due to the stateโs autopsy backlog.
Lawmakers are trying to address this in several different ways, but it is all tied up in the looming budget right now.
Barbara Walsh is the founder of Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina, an organization for families of fentanyl victims. She said fixing the autopsy backlog is critical to getting families closure and justice.
For months, Walsh had no idea what killed her 24-year-old daughter Sofia who had just moved to Charlotte for a new job.
โShe died because she drank a water bottle that had diluted fentanyl in it,โ Walsh said.
Now, families sheโs helping through her organization are waiting even longer, sometimes over a year, for toxicology results as the medical examinerโs office faces a massive backlog in autopsies.
Walsh is vocal about the state budget as some lawmakers have promised to help clear the autopsy backlog.
One of the new proposals would pay pathologists more to try and fill positions at the short-staffed medical examinerโs office, which has seen a 30% increase in cases. Cases involving suspected overdose deaths are up by 58%.
Ruling is first-of-itโs kind to go after overseas fentanyl producers
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) -On Wednesday, it was announced a Summit County judge ruled in favor of the Rauh family, whoโs son died of a fentanyl overdose in 2015, and ordered a Chinese cartel to pay $18 million.
Thomas โTommyโ Rauh became addicted to prescription opioids after a rollerblading accident, which then led to him using heroin.
According to his father James Rauh, Tommy tried to overcome the addiction but took a fatal dose in 2015, laced with fentanyl.
The fentanyl that killed Tommy was traced to, and produced by, the Zheng drug trafficking cartel in China.
โOur son Tommy was stolen from us,โ Rauh said. โHe never stood a chance against the incredibly potent poison provided by the Zhengs. All for what? The reckless and malicious greed of the Zheng cartel. To save American lives, we must stop the foreign manufacturers and traffickers of illegal fentanyl and hold them accountable.โ
It’s a killer the size of grain of sand or the tip of a pen. Illegal fentanyl is running rampant through North Carolina, and the consequences are terrifying.
The Nash County Sheriffโs Office recently confiscated enough fentanyl to kill every person in the county. WRAL Investigates spent several days with undercover agents and confidential informants on the streets of Nash County as law enforcement battles the war on this poison.
Early one summer morning, the Nash County Sheriffโs Special Response Team conducted a search at a mobile home. A family, including kids in their pajamas, filed out of the home. One person came out in handcuffs.
“Children put things in their mouth. That makes it more alarming,” said one member of the response team.
With their work done at the mobile home, the next raid was on, this time in Rocky Mount. A flash bang disrupts the silence at a home on Pine Street.The SRT quickly enters the home yelling, “Come to the center of the room” and “Hands Up!”
“This is an older neighborhood with a lot of good families in it. This house โ drugs were bought out of it yesterday,” WRAL Investigates was told.
A search revealed fentanyl and heroin, as well as a stolen gun. The SRT also found high-powered ammunition.
“As you can see with tips of these they are capable of going through wood-framed houses and bullet-proof vests,” investigators told WRAL Investigates.
Targeting guns, drugs and gangs is the mission of the Nash County Sheriffโs Office under the direction of Sheriff Keith Stone.
The Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina will rally at the N.C. State Capitol Building later this month, pushing for stronger penalties for illegal distribution of the synthetic opioid and more funding for early intervention, Naloxone and processing toxicology reports. They are also asking state lawmakers for opioid overdoses to be investigated as homicides.
As NC Newsline has reported, North Carolina has been hard hit by fentanyl, an epidemic within the larger opioid epidemic. Some 13,671 North Carolinians have been killed by fentanyl in the last nine years, according to data from the N.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner โ an average of eight people per day.
Even those numbers likely do not take in the full scope of the problem, medical experts say.
In North Carolina, death certificates donโt have a specific code for fentanylโs involvement in a drug overdose. There is a code โ T40.4 โ for โother synthetic narcotic overdose.โ The Epidemiology, Surveillance and Informatics unit of the N.C. Division of Public Healthโs Injury and Violence Prevention Branch notes that most of these cases are โdue to illicitly manufactured fentanyl and fentanyl analogues,โ but can also include prescription fentanyl and other, less potent synthetic narcotics like Tramadol.
An analysis of statistics from the state medical examinerโs office found overdose deaths with the T40.4 code rose from 442 in 2016 (the first year for which the office had such statistics) to 3,163 in 2021 โ an increase of 616%.
As of April,ย according to OCME data, there were 1,116 fentanyl-positive overdose deaths in the state so far this year.
NC Fentanyl Victim Families invite the public to join as they Rise Up Against Fentanyl at the
Whose Child Dies Next? Rally @ NC Capitol National Fentanyl Awareness & Prevention Day
Sunday August 20, 2023, 2-4pm, Rain or Shine
NC State Capitol Building, South Side, 1 West Edenton Street, Raleigh NC
Parking: free on street and paid parking in municipal lots
Rules: No signs on sticks/poles, no drones, no firearms/weapons, no climbing trees/walls, statues
Attendees: open to the public, fentanyl victim families, press, elected officials, law enforcement, educators, advocates, allies
NC Fentanyl Facts
13,671 NC residents have been killed by fentanyl in the last 9 years, enough to fill the Raleigh Convention Center (NC OCME)
8 NC residents die each day by fentanyl
NC Infants, Toddlers, Middle & High Schoolers, and Young Adults are killed by fentanyl
Fentanyl deaths are preventable with early intervention education and naloxone
What NC Fentanyl Victim Families Want
To Save Lives!
Pass Senate Bill 189! Pass Senate Bill 250! Both modify GS 14-18.4 Death by Distribution Law
NC Legislature Must Increase Funding of NC DHHS NC OCME to increase Salaries & Hire Chemists to process Toxicology Reports. Right now there is 5-12 month delay in results reported back to grieving families & law enforcement!
For all drug related deaths to be investigated as potential homicides & crime scenes
To be recognized as Crime Victims by the NC Justice System & NC Law Enforcement
Organizers
FENTANYL VICTIMS NETWORK of NC Barb Walsh, Executive Director barb@fentvic.org 919-614-3830 website:ย fentvic.org 501(c)(3) charitable nonprofit EIN #88-3921380
FORGOTTEN VICTIMS of NORTH CAROLINA Patricia Drewes, Founder patriciadrewes@yahoo.com 252-204-9611 FB page link: http://forgottenvictimsofnc.org/
โThey need to get deadly fentanyl off of our streets,โ said Attorney General Josh Stein. โWe can do more to hold accountable drug traffickers and keep the people of North Carolina safe. Iโll do everything in my power to rid our state of this scourge.โ
For more extensive press release email request to barb@fentvic.org