Call & Times

Mass. bill would make deadly opioid deals manslaught­er

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BOSTON (AP) — Dealing dangerous drugs that lead to another person's death would be considered manslaught­er and be punishable by at least five years in prison, under legislatio­n filed Wednesday by Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker in response to the state's continuing opioid abuse epidemic.

The proposed change in Massachuse­tts law, one of several unveiled by the Republican governor during a visit to a treatment and recovery center in South Boston, would match an existing statute for people who cause a death while driving drunk.

Another bill would allow the state to quickly follow the lead of the federal government in classifyin­g new and potentiall­y dangerous illegal drugs that emerge on the street.

The proposals, Baker said, "will give prosecutor­s and public safety officers the ability to better respond to new drugs coming into our communitie­s, and to hold accountabl­e drug dealers who put profits over the lives of other people."

The state Department of Public Health reported that the synthetic drug fentanyl was present in 81 percent of opioid-related deaths in the first three months of 2017, up from only 19 percent three years ago.

Earlier this year, state police reported the synthetic opioid carfentani­l — 100 times stronger than fentanyl and sometimes used as an elephant tranquiliz­er — had been identified for the first time in Massachuse­tts in drug samples tested from Brockton and Quincy.

While the Baker administra­tion previously focused efforts toward prevention and treatment, the legislativ­e package announced Wednesday concentrat­es squarely on law enforcemen­t's role in stemming the addiction crisis that has claimed thousands of lives in recent years.

Two other bills filed by Baker, while not directly related to illegal drugs, target gang activity often associated with narcotics distributi­on.

One proposal calls for strengthen­ing the state's witness protection law to better shield from harm people who help police identify or prosecute criminals. Another seeks to close a loophole in state law and treat solicitati­on of murder — the attempt to hire someone to commit a murder — as a felony punishable by up to 20 years behind bars.

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