WSOC TV9 in Charlotte segment featuring Barbara Walsh advocating for speedier toxicology and autopsy reports.
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Family says guilty plea in daughterโs fentanyl death is a step in the right direction
GASTON COUNTY, N.C. โ A 19-year-old man pleaded guilty in Gaston County to giving his 16-year-old girlfriend a pain pill laced with fentanyl.
Investigators said Abigail Saunderson died in September 2022 from fentanyl poisoning. Now, her family wants others to hear her story and stay away from dangerous drugs.
Saundersonโs mother, Tracy Saunderson-Ross, said Nicholas Gageโs guilty plea Monday was a big win for saving lives. She said the case was critical because more young people like her daughter are losing their lives to fentanyl, and it can be avoided.
Saunderson-Ross showed Channel 9โฒs Ken Lemon a lock of her daughterโs hair she brought with her to court.
โThis is the last thing I will ever touch of my baby girl,โ she said.
She said her daughter asked Gage for a prescription pain pill last September. She said Saunderson didnโt know the pill she was taking was laced with fentanyl, and it killed her.
Read the full article and watch the video on the WSOC Tv9 web site.
WSOC TV 9 Investigates: Incomplete Autopsies
WSOC TV 9 Investigates: Incomplete autopsies from state impacting deadly NC drug cases
UNION COUNTY, N.C. โ Channel 9 is continuing to investigate a statewide autopsy backlog which means some cases are getting left unsolved.
In some types of criminal cases, the medical examinerโs office isnโt even doing a full autopsy, which is making it harder to prosecute crimes in our community. Channel 9โs Genevieve Curtis found out that many of those cases are overdoses.
The Mecklenburg County Medical Examinerโs Office performs a full autopsy in overdose cases so that prosecutors can go after the drug dealers under the 2019 Death by Distribution law. But several of our local counties have to send their cases to Raleighโs medical examiner, where theyโre not getting those same results.
Union County District Attorney Trey Robison has been aggressive about prosecuting dealers who sell drugs which cause an overdose death.
โWe canโt prosecute any of these cases without autopsies that we can take into court and show to a jury to try and prove our case,โ DA Robison said.
But to prove it in court, Robison needs a full autopsy.
Read the full article on the WSOC TV 9 website.
NC families of fentanyl victims advocate for more state action to fight opioid crisis
RALEIGH N.C. (WNCN) โ Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration approved lifesaving medication to combat the opioid crisis.
While families of fentanyl victims in North Carolina are praising the decision, they say thereโs more to do on a state level to prevent deaths.
Barb Walshโs 24-year-old daughter, Sophia, died in 2021 after drinking from what she thought was a typical water bottle, instead it had dissolved fentanyl inside.
Walsh created the Fentanyl Victims Network to connect families impacted in the state.
โEvery night I call five families because I want to talk to them,โ Walsh said. โTo collect these people and let them know that theyโre not alone and they need to join us. We are stronger together.โ
Read the full article on the CBS17 web site.
Wilson librarian uses Narcan to save man’s life during overdose
A librarian in Wilson County saved a man’s life late last year during an overdose by administering the drug Narcan, reviving him as police and medics arrived.
Read the full article and watch the video segment on the WRAL TV5 web site.
CBS17 Coverage of Family Summit
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) โ Dozens of families from across North Carolina and beyond were together in Raleigh on Saturday, remembering loved ones who died from fentanyl poisoning.
โMatthew was my first grandchild, my first grandson, and I always called him my uno because he was my number one,โ one woman said to a group at the Family Summit on Illicit Fentanyl Fatalities in North Carolina.
Family members said the names of victims and their forever ages.
โJesseโs forever age is 26,โ one mom said of a son she lost to fentanyl poisoning.
Families were crying together, hugging each other and remembering loved ones.
Read the article and watch the news segment on the CBS17 web site.
Grandmother becomes an advocate after losing granddaughter to fentanyl overdose
GREENSBORO, N.C. โ Debbie Peeden is a grandmother, mother and now activist.
What You Need To Know
- Debbie Peedenโs granddaughter Ashley died from fentanyl in 2021
- A report from the DEA shows that 6 out of 10 fentanyl-laced prescription pills contain a lethal dose of the drug
- In 2021, according to the CDC, almost 108,000 Americans died from drug poisoning
Peeden said her granddaughter Ashley was hanging out with a friend in 2021 when she died.
โSo turns out the cocaine that she thought she had was mainly fentanyl, and she had enough fentanyl all in her system from the toxicology report to have killed several people,โ Peeden said.
This is becoming common with young adults. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, overdose deaths involving psychostimulants with abuse potential rose from 547 in 1999 to 23,837 in 2020 and continued to increase to 32,537 deaths in 2021.
Peeden says she will never be the same since the loss of Ashley. She and her husband had custody of her when she was just 12 months old and raised her.
Grandmother applauds schools for bringing awareness to dangers of fentanyl
GREENSBORO, N.C. โ Fentanyl is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine, and 50 times deadlier than heroin.
With substance abuse a growing issue in high schools, the PTSA at Northern Guilford is planning a town hall to draw attention to the problem.
Debbie Peeden lost her granddaughter, Ashley, less than 2 years ago.ย
The Northern Guilford graduate faced mental health challenges for many years.
Eventually, a deadly dose of fentanyl would take her life.
“I tell people, I was her biggest advocate her whole entire life and I will be her biggest advocate in her death. I’m not going to have her death be in vain,” said Peeden.
Peeden made it her mission to draw more attention to the growing problem of substance abuse.ย
Read the complete article on the WFMY News 2 web site.
Narcan kits installed in high schools to fight teen overdoses

A growing number of schools are installing kits stocked with naloxone, also known as Narcan, amid an alarming surge in teen overdoses. NBC Newsโ Morgan Radford reports from Camden County, New Jersey, to learn about one districtโs plan to protect students as dangerous fentanyl becomes more prevalent.
View the original NBC News story on YouTube or the article and video on WRAL.com.