Dayton Daily News

3 women who died OD’d on carfentani­l

Carfentani­l 10,000 times stronger than morphine.

- By Amanda Garrett

The overdose deaths of three 20-year-old women celebratin­g one of their birthdays in April stunned Greater Akron.

Tara Williams, Ashtyn Andrade and Courtney Collier were not drug addicts.

The three may have smoked marijuana, family and friends said, but they could not imagine them intentiona­lly dabbling in heroin or any of its lab-made cousins during the opioid scourge that’s left scores of Summit County residents dead.

Yet the Summit County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed Friday that all three died after overdosing on carfentani­l — the elephant tranquiliz­er that surfaced in Akron over the July 4 weekend in 2016, causing at least 236 overdoses in Akron over a three-week period.

Toxicology tests also revealed that the young women had MDMA — a popular party drug more commonly known as “ecstasy” or “molly” — in their systems.

Was the MDMA laced with carfentani­l? A tiny amount of carfentani­l, no bigger than a grain of sand, can kill an adult. Or did the three knowingly take MDMA and then a second drug they did not know was carfentani­l? It wasn’t clear Friday.

In the eight months since the deaths of Williams, Andrade and Collier, Akron narcotics investigat­ors have narrowed their search to a person suspected of supplying the carfentani­l and MDMA, police spokesman Lt. Rick Edwards said Friday. But they don’t have the evidence needed to make an arrest, he said.

Health officials in April said the case illustrate­d the danger opioids now pose to recreation­al drug users. Dr. Doug Smith of the Summit County ADM (Alcoholism, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services) Board said after the women died that this is the riskiest time in history to use drugs bought on the street, because you never know what you are truly buying.

Since then, there have been reports of hundreds of people across the country overdosing on opioid-laced cocaine, lab-made synthetic marijuana and methamphet­amine that looks like candy.

The Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office earlier this month issued a special warning after discoverin­g the powerful synthetic painkiller fentanyl disguised and sold as 30 mg oxycodone pills.

“This is an immediate threat to the public health safety, causing a heightened concern for potentiall­y fatal overdoses,” authoritie­s said.

Oxycodone — the opioid in Oxycontin, Percocet and Percodan — is about 50 percent stronger than morphine, The Washington Post reports. Fentanyl can be about 50 to 100 percent stronger than morphine, the newspaper reports. And carfentani­l, the drugs that killed the three young women in Akron, is 10,000 times stronger than morphine.

Both fentanyl and carfentani­l are often made in Chinese labs, ordered by drug dealers over the internet, shipping via U.S. mail and sold on the streets.

Last week the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed what many already suspected: Fentanyl is now the drug most frequently involved in U.S. overdose deaths.

It marks an evolution in the recent drug crisis that began to blossom in 2011 when the doctors were overprescr­ibing oxycodone. The painkiller was responsibl­e for most U.S. overdose deaths until 2015, when many users turned to cheaper and more easily obtainable heroin.

But a year later, fentanyl and, to a lesser extent, carfentani­l hit the United States in what the CDC calls “the third wave” of the opioid epidemic.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Tara Williams (left) and Ashtyn Andrade pose for a selfie photograph in November 2017.
CONTRIBUTE­D Tara Williams (left) and Ashtyn Andrade pose for a selfie photograph in November 2017.

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