Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Carfentani­l and fentanyl are driving forces in a deadly drug epidemic, and it’s not just addicts who are increasing­ly at risk. It’s law enforcemen­t too.

Officers taking extra precaution­s following new opioid epidemic

- By Juliet Linderman The Associated Press

BEL AIR, Md. — As Cpl. Kevin Phillips pulled up to investigat­e a suspected opioid overdose, paramedics were already at the Maryland home giving a man a lifesaving dose of the overdose reversal drug Narcan. Drugs were easy to find: a package of heroin on the railing leading to a basement; another batch on a shelf above a nightstand.

The deputy already had put on gloves and grabbed evidence baggies, his usual routine for canvassing a house. He swept the first package from the railing into a bag and sealed it; then a torn Crayola crayon box went from the nightstand into a bag of its own. Inside that basement nightstand: even more bags, but nothing that looked like drugs.

Then — moments after the man being treated by paramedics came to — the overdose hit.

“My face felt like it was burning. I felt extremely light-headed. I felt like I was getting dizzy,” he said. “I stood there for two seconds and thought, ‘Oh my God, I didn’t just get exposed to something.’ I just kept thinking about the carfentani­l.”

Carfentani­l came to mind because just hours earlier, Phillips’ boss, Harford County Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler, sent an email to deputies saying the synthetic opioid so powerful that it’s used to tranquiliz­e elephants had, for the first time ever, showed up in a toxicology report from a fatal overdose in the county. The sheriff had urged everyone to use extra caution when responding to drug scenes.

Carfentani­l and fentanyl are driving forces in the most deadly drug epidemic the United States has ever seen. Because of their potency, it’s not just addicts who are increasing­ly at risk — it’s those tasked with saving lives and investigat­ing the illegal trade. Police department­s across the U.S. are arming officers with the opioid antidote Narcan. Now, some first responders have had to use it on colleagues, or themselves.

The paramedic who administer­ed Phillips’ Narcan on May 19 started feeling sick herself soon after; she didn’t need Narcan but was treated for exposure to the drugs.

Earlier this month, an Ohio officer overdosed in a police station after brushing off with a bare hand a trace of white powder left from a drug scene. Like Phillips, he was revived after several doses of Narcan. Last fall, 11 SWAT officers in Hartford, Connecticu­t, were sickened after a flash-bang grenade sent particles of heroin and fentanyl airborne.

Phillips’ overdose was eye-opening for his department, Gahler said. Before then, deputies didn’t have a protocol for overdose scenes; many showed up without any protective gear.

Gahler has since spent $5,000 for 100 kits that include a protective suit, booties, gloves, and face masks. Carfentani­l can be absorbed through the skin and easily inhaled, and a single particle is so powerful that simply touching it can cause an overdose, Gahler said. Additional gear will be distribute­d to investigat­ors tasked with cataloguin­g overdose scenes — heavy-duty gloves and more robust suits.

Gahler said 37 people have died so far this year from overdoses in his county, which is between Baltimore and Philadelph­ia. The county has received toxicology reports on 19 of those cases, and each showed signs of synthetic opioids.

“This is all a game-changer for us in law enforcemen­t,” Gahler said.

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Kevin Phillips

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