On a mission to prosecute fentanyl dealers, Union County opens its own autopsy center

Read the original article on the Charlotte Observer website.

When autopsy backlogs in North Carolina threatened Union County officersโ€™ ability to prosecute drug overdose cases, they opened their own center to continue their yearslong drug purge amid state delays.

A temporary autopsy center that opened in the bottom of a Monroe hospital Dec. 17 is the ninth regional center in the state. Itโ€™s also one countyโ€™s latest attempt to combat two issues plaguing the state: drug deaths and autopsy delays.

The North Carolina General Assembly since its 2023 session has given Union County $22 million to open the South Piedmont Regional Autopsy Center under oversight from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. The county soon hopes find a permanent building to better host eight more counties and get the proper accreditation to help with the toxicology reports backlog, too.

Autopsy and toxicology backlogs have been caused by increasing overdose deaths and too few forensic pathologists, a Charlotte Observer investigation revealed last year. They leave grieving families and investigating law enforcement waiting too long for answers.

For Union County, those delays were made worse when the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner moved Union Countyโ€™s autopsies from Mecklenburg County โ€” less than an hour away โ€” to Wake County โ€” about three hours away โ€” in 2022.

The switch was supposed to help with backlogs, but transportation time coupled with the Raleigh centerโ€™s staffing shortages created more delays, said Tony Underwood, the chief deputy of operations with the Union County Sheriffโ€™s Office.

Each Raleigh pathologist, the Observer previously reported, completes, on average, 557 autopsies each year. Thatโ€™s more than twice the number recommended by a national accrediting group, Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kody Kinsley previously told the Observer.

โ€œBottom line, plain and simple, the medical examination system is in crisis,โ€ Kinsley said.

The Raleigh autopsy center told Underwood it does not โ€œroutinely do full autopsies in suspected drug overdose cases,โ€ he said in an interview with the Observer.

Mecklenburgโ€™s center did, Underwood said.

The change became a problem for Union County law enforcement.

The sheriffโ€™s office and Union District Attorney Trey Robison were charging and prosecuting drug dealers who sold deadly substances to people even before a state law paved the way to do that.

A 2019 bill introduced a โ€œdeath by distributionโ€ charge to North Carolina, allowing dealers to be charged with killing someone by selling or giving them the drug that killed them. It is largely regarded as a โ€œhard-to-proveโ€ charge, but Union County is among the top counties pursuing and prosecuting it, according to nonprofit research by the Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina.

Union County, Underwood said, had been charging dealers with second-degree murder before โ€œdeath by distributionโ€ was introduced.

That meant Union County officers were routinely requesting autopsies and toxicology reports in almost every overdose case.

But in Raleigh, they sometimes needed to have โ€œprobable causeโ€ that a crime was committed to request an autopsy, Underwood said. Toxicology reports, which show what substances were in a personโ€™s system when they died, typically give probable cause.

But state toxicology reports are finished more slowly than autopsy reports, sometimes taking months or years to be completed.

In 2023 in Raleigh, the medical examinerโ€™s office had just one forensic toxicologist to certify all drug casework, the Observer previously reported.

Union Countyโ€™s temporary autopsy center is a step in the right direction, said Barb Walsh, the founder and executive director of Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina. But North Carolina really needs more toxicologists, she said.

Walsh, whose daughter died after unknowingly drinking from a water bottle that had fentanyl in it, had to wait five months to learn what killed her daughter in 2021.

โ€œAnd I thought that was awful,โ€ she said, โ€œbut I am consistently getting calls from families that are waiting 10 and 12 months.โ€

From 2019 to 2023, according to the state health department, North Carolina experienced a 26% increase in cases. That was โ€œundoubtedly influenced by the 69% increase in suspected drug overdose cases,โ€ spokesperson Hannah Jones wrote in an email.

โ€œAnother regional autopsy center is a welcome addition to the NC Medical Examiner System to help with the many cases that come through,โ€ she wrote.

In 2025, Underwood said, the sheriffโ€™s office is seeking accreditation to expand its toxicology lab โ€” which is currently used to test blood from impaired drivers โ€” to be able to test blood from those who died from an overdose or fentanyl poisoning.

Fentanyl trafficking is big business in the Queen City. Feds want to run it dry.

Read the original article on the Charlotte Observer website.

By Julia Coin of the Charlotte Observer.

Charlotte, a U.S. banking hub, was one of the first cities targeted in by a federal Treasury Department program aimed at shutting down fentanyl suppliersโ€™ businesses.

Charlotteโ€™s fentanyl problem has prompted federal attention and intervention. Officials involved in a U.S. Treasury program rolled out under President Joe Biden met in Charlotte Wednesday to join private and public leaders โ€” from federal agents to sheriffs to bankers โ€” to learn how to better shut down fentanyl traffickersโ€™ business operations.

Charlotte โ€” the countryโ€™s second-largest banking center โ€” was one of the first seven U.S. cities the program, called PROTECT, visited since it launched in May. It is focused almost entirely on finding fentanyl dealers and suppliers and severing them from their money.

The U.S. Attorneyโ€™s Office for the Western District of North Carolina has a similar program in place, but the federal involvement will enhance how information is shared between private and public sectors โ€” or between federal agents, sheriffs and bankers, officials said. It is designed to give prosecutors more insight into how dealers move money, from quick ATM deposits to big bank account transfers.

Fentanyl has killed 37,000 North Carolinans in the last two decades, according to N.C. Department of Justice data.

The highly addictive and lethal synthetic opioid has flooded communities around Charlotte and overwhelmed local jails, police departments, courts and even classrooms, The Charlotte Observer previously reported.

Grassroots organizations, like the nonprofit Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina, tackle the trickle-down effect of fentanylโ€™s pervasiveness.

โ€œA person like me โ€” a person with a dead kid โ€” Iโ€™m worried about getting dealers off the street,โ€ said Barb Walsh, the executive director of the nonprofit.

The U.S. Treasury Department exists in a different sphere, she said, but those spheres canโ€™t stay separate for much longer.

โ€œIf thereโ€™s nobody else at the national level trying to help,โ€ she said, โ€œthen what weโ€™re doing wonโ€™t matter.โ€

Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo, in an interview with The Charlotte Observer, said the department is focused on cutting the drug off at its source.

โ€œIf you are a drug dealer or if you are someone whoโ€™s running a distribution network,โ€ he said, โ€œyou should know, and your family should know that weโ€™re going to come after the money you are making by selling these drugs into these communities and killing our local citizens.โ€

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