LEXINGTON โ On a recent Saturday, family members gathered in a circle at a church here to share stories of loved ones lost to fentanyl.
โOur whole world is turned upside down,โ said Michelle, a Forsyth County mother who lost her 19-year-old son to fentanyl poisoning. She didnโt want to use her full name for this story or go into details about his death, as authorities are still investigating.
She doesnโt think her son knew he had taken fentanyl, which has become more common as drug dealers add it to everything from heroin to fake prescription medications.
Just a few grains of the highly potent opioid โ about 2 milligrams, an amount thatโs barely enough to cover the date on a penny โ can be fatal. In 2021, fentanyl was involved in 83 percent of fatal medication or drug overdoses in the state, according to N.C. Department of Health and Human Services.
โIf this can happen to him, this can happen to anybody,โ said Michelle, who has made it her mission to help educate other parents about the dangers of fentanyl.
Sheโs not alone in her fight.
Barbara Walsh, whose Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina organized the recent Lexington meeting, is pushing for North Carolina to require that the opioid reversal drug naloxone be available in all schools. Her 24-year-old daughter died from fentanyl poisoning in 2021 after unknowingly drinking a bottle of water laced with the drug.
Read the original article and watch the video on the CBS17 website.
SELMA, N.C. (WNCN) โ Agents with the Johnston County Sheriffโs Office narcotics division and STAR team put a huge drug case behind them this week.
According to deputies, numerous agents pulled up to 720 Campground Road Wednesday to execute a search warrant at the home. Inside were two adults and one child, including the subject of the investigation, 29-year-old Rashid Campbell. No one else in the residence were criminally charged.
Deputies say approximately 6,000 fentanyl pills were seized during the arrest, with a street value of $125,000. More pills were seized in numerous purchases in their two-month undercover investigation.
Additionally, deputies say they located three firearms, cash, and a money counting machine inside the home.
Campbell, who is a convicted felon, was arrested for numerous firearm and drug charges. They include multiple counts of trafficking in opium or heroin as well as possession of a Schedule II controlled substance with intent to manufacture, sell, or deliver.
Campbell appeared in court Friday for the charges, where his bond was set by the clerk for $2.5 million.
Meta Platformsย is running ads on Facebook and Instagram that steer users to online marketplaces for illegal drugs, months after The Wall Street Journal first reported that the social-media giant was facing a federal investigation over the practice.
The company has continued to collect revenue from ads that violate its policies, which ban promoting the sale of illicit or recreational drugs. A review by the Journal in July found dozens of ads marketing illegal substances such as cocaine and prescription opioids, including as recently as Friday. A separate analysis over recent months by an industry watchdog group found hundreds of such ads.
DAVIDSON COUNTY, N.C. โ Six months after a woman died by an overdose, Davidson County Sheriff’s Office said it has arrested the person who supplied her the drugs.
The investigation began on January 28, when deputies said they responded to the death of an adult female in the Wallburg community. Then in July, detectives received toxicology results from the state medical examiner’s office that confirmed the death was due to fentanyl.ย
As a result, detectives arrested 47-year-old Wayne Phillips on July 26. He was charged with one count of death by distribution.
Phillips was ordered to be held at the Davidson County Detention Center.
Despite running counter to its own policies banning such ads, tech-savvy dealers manage to skirt Meta’s rules by posting photos of their wares instead of writing out what they’re selling in the product description, which would trigger the AI censors deployed on the social networks. In one such ad found by the WSJ, the letters “DMT” are spelled out in what is presumably a powdered version of the powerful hallucinogen, which is short for the chemical name N,N-Dimethyltryptamine.
Health officials and lawmakers have warned consumers about the opioid-like effects of tianeptine. But stores are technically still allowed to continue the sale of the drug — for now. Gov. Roy Cooper this month signed into law a bill banning the substance known as โgas station heroin.โ But the drug is still sitting on shelves around the region.
Thatโs because North Carolinaโs law doesnโt go into effect until Dec. 1. In the meantime, stores are technically still allowed to continue the sale of tianeptine.
Health officials and lawmakers have warned consumers about the opioid-like effects of tianeptine, which, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, has been tied to serious health risks and deaths across the country.
In 2020, there were 151 poison control center cases involving tianeptine, according to the FDA. Thatโs up from just 11 total from 2000 to 2013.
Concern over the drug led to a rare bipartisan effort to ban the product in North Carolina. Lawmakers in June overwhelmingly voted to approve the removal of tianeptine from store shelves. Cooper signed the bill this month, joining at least nine other states โ including border states Tennessee and Georgia โ that have passed similar bans.
The Justice Department indicted a Chinese national Monday for allegedly importing 4,000 pounds of fentanyl precursors into the United States. Itโs one of the largest fentanyl seizures to date. The chemicals are enough to make pills that could kill millions of Americans.
The State Superintendent’s Student Advisory Council drafted model legislation to address a problem they’re seeing among classmates.
Some North Carolina students want to do something about rising drug use and mental health issues among young people.
On Thursday, a student group told the State Board of Education that schools should have wellness teams to help intervene when they see problems.
Sarah Beitar, a member of the State Superintendentโs Student Advisory Council, said she knows someone at her Harnett County high school who overdosed.
โWe have freshmen, so children as young as 14 and 15, having to deal with these topics of overdose and making sure that theyโre being safe,โ she said.
STATESVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) โ โIโm doing this because my 24-year-old daughter, Sophia, was killed by fentanyl on August 16th. And I didnโt even know how to spell fentanyl,โ said Barb Walsh, the executive director of the Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina.
Sheโs been a voice for families suffering the loss of a loved one by fentanyl poisoning.
โItโs just a network of damaged families who are getting together and finding their power and their passion to heal one another, but also to stop that not from killing someone else,โ Walsh said.
The network includes counties like Mecklenburg, Rowan, Iredell, and Catawba. Pictures of those who lost their lives to the poisoning lined the walls at the Bristol Road community center.
Many of their families are doing their best to keep their memories alive.
โFentanyl took my husband on November 2023, And it has changed our whole daily routine. He was in my house every single day walking around and now heโs not,โ said Stephanie Triplett. She started โEmbers for Ashesโ in response to the death of her husband.
โIn 2022, my son T.J. passed away of fentanyl poisoning. He had 18 nanograms of fentanyl in his body, which is enough to kill nine people. He had taken what he thought was oxycodone, but it was a pill that had fentanyl. And heโs been gone since 2022,โ said Stephanie Duck. She started โTJโs Story Lives Onโ
Through tears, families discussed their losses โ but also laid out an action plan to save other victims from death โ putting naloxone in every school.
โWe just donโt know where a young person might encounter fentanyl. And so the safest thing is to have an antidote within the school, just like an ied, just like an EpiPen, just like a fire extinguisher. Itโs not expensive. So weโre advocating for doses per school, not just with school resource officers, but as an emergency first aid kit,โ Walsh said.
It has been reported that ten people in North Carolina die each day as a result of fentanyl poisoning and over 375 people in Davidson County have also died as a result since 2015. Recently Davidson County has been inundated with more deaths associated with fentanyl. It is saddening to hear the number of individuals that have lost their lives from fentanyl poisoning and the statistics are as shocking when the age range of those killed by fentanyl is exposed. Locally, there have been countless arrests made by law enforcement of persons selling the deadly drug within our own community. There have also been arrests made of parents and caretakers of children that are being poisoned after ingesting the drug, unaware. This dangerous drug effects everyone and has the potential of killing someone that each of us know and loves, if it hasnโt already. It is time to end the excuses that too many live by, that it is not our problem, because it now is.
The General Assembly recognizes that deaths due to opioids are devastating families and communities across North Carolina. The General Assembly finds that the opioid crisis is overwhelming medical providers engaged in the lawful distribution of controlled substances and is straining prevention and treatment efforts. As a result of these related deaths, the General Assembly enacts this law to encourage effective intervention by the criminal justice system to hold illegal drug dealers accountable for criminal conduct that results in death.
The older version of the law stated that a person is guilty of death by distribution if all of the following requirements are met:
The person unlawfully sold at least one controlled substance such as an opioid cocaine or methamphetamine
The substance sold cause the death of the user
The person who sold the drug did not act with malice
The crime was a Class C felony, which usually results in a 5-12 year prison sentence with a maximum sentence of 19 years.
The updated version of the law removes the malice requirement or proof that the drug was sold. Under the new law, perpetrators can be charged with a Class C felony if they simply distribute a drug such as methamphetamine, fentanyl or cocaine that leads to a victimโs death. If the perpetrator did act with malice, the distributor could be charged with a Class B2 felony.
On August 10th from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at Breeden Amphitheater in Lexington, A Raced Against Drugs (RAD) is hoping to educate the community and to counteract fentanyl use and distribution with their event entitled A Day of Recovery. In addition, the event organizers and directors of the non profit organization, Michael and Lorrie Loomis will increase awareness of the life-saving drug naloxone, which is a synthetic drug, similar to morphine, that blocks opiate receptors in the nervous system. Naloxone is used in the case of overdose.
RAD is a passion project for the Loomisโ after their son, James Allen Loomis passed away from fentanyl poisoning on April, 22, 2021, making him โForever 27.โ
The RAD event is for everyone and will feature numerous experts offering kind advice for all that attend and live entertainment. There will also be food trucks, a 50/50 raffle and much more. For information please visit: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1374857129674223. To contribute to the organization to reach the directors email raceagainstdrugs2024@gmail.com.
It is time to eliminate the threat of fentanyl in our community and across NC.