Lodi News-Sentinel

The emerging MADD movement: Parents rise up against drug deaths

- Rachel Scheier

Life as he knew it ended for Matt Capelouto two days before Christmas in 2019, when he found his 20-year-old daughter, Alexandra, dead in her childhood bedroom in Temecula, California. Rage overtook grief when authoritie­s ruled her death an accident.

The college sophomore, home for the holidays, had taken half a pill she bought from a dealer on Snapchat. It turned out to be fentanyl, the powerful synthetic opioid that helped drive drug overdose deaths in the U.S. to more than 100,000 last year. “She was poisoned, and nothing was going to happen to the person who did it,” he said. “I couldn’t stand for that.”

The self-described political moderate said the experience made him cynical about California’s reluctance to impose harsh sentences for drug offenses.

So Capelouto, the suburban dad who once devoted all his time to running his print shop and raising his four daughters, launched a group called Drug Induced Homicide and traveled from his home to Sacramento in April to lobby for legislatio­n known as “Alexandra’s Law.” The bill would have made it easier for California prosecutor­s to convict the sellers of lethal drugs on homicide charges.

Capelouto’s organizati­on is part of a nationwide movement of parents-turned-activists fighting the increasing­ly deadly drug crisis — and they are challengin­g California’s doctrine that drugs should be treated as a health problem rather than prosecuted by the criminal justice system. Modeled after Mothers Against Drunk Driving, which sparked a movement in the 1980s, organizati­ons such as Victims of Illicit Drugs and the Alexander Neville Foundation seek to raise public awareness and influence drug policy. One group, Mothers Against Drug Deaths, pays homage to MADD by borrowing its acronym.

The groups press state lawmakers for stricter penalties for dealers and lobby technology companies to allow parents to monitor their kids’ communicat­ions on social media. They erect billboards blaming politician­s for the drug crisis and stage “die-in” protests against open-air drug markets in Los Angeles’ Venice Beach and San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborho­od.

“This problem is going to be solved by the grassroots efforts of affected families,” said Ed Ternan, who runs the Pasadenaba­sed group Song for Charlie, which focuses on educating youths about the dangers of counterfei­t pills.

Many parents mobilized after a wave of deaths that began in 2019. Often, they involved high school or college students who thought they were taking OxyContin or Xanax purchased on social media but were actually ingesting pills containing fentanyl. The drug first hit the East Coast nearly a decade ago, largely through the heroin supply, but Mexican drug cartels have since introduced counterfei­t pharmaceut­icals laced with the highly addictive powder into California and Arizona to hook new customers.

In many cases, the overdose victims are straightA students or star athletes from the suburbs, giving rise to an army of educated, engaged parents who are challengin­g the silence and stigma surroundin­g drug deaths.

Ternan knew almost nothing about fentanyl when his 22-year-old son, Charlie, died in his fraternity house bedroom at Santa Clara University a few weeks before he was scheduled to graduate in spring 2020. Relatives determined from messages on Charlie’s phone that he had intended to buy Percocet, a prescripti­on painkiller he had taken after back surgery two years earlier. First responders said the strapping 6foot-2-inch, 235-pound college senior died within a half-hour of swallowing the counterfei­t pill.

Ternan discovered a string of similar deaths in other Silicon Valley communitie­s. In 2021, 106 people died from fentanyl overdoses in Santa Clara County — up from 11 in 2018. The deaths have included a Stanford University sophomore and a 12year-old girl in San Jose.

With the help of two executives at Google who lost sons to pills laced with fentanyl, Ternan persuaded Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and other social media platforms to donate ad space to warnings about counterfei­t drugs. Pressure from parent groups has also spurred Santa Monica-based Snapchat to deploy tools to detect drug sales and restrictio­ns designed to make it harder for dealers to target minors.

Since the earliest days of the opioid epidemic, the families of people dealing with addiction and of those who have died from overdoses have supported one another in church basements and on online platforms from Florida to Oregon. Now, the family-run organizati­ons that have sprung from California’s fentanyl crisis have begun cooperatin­g with one another.

A network of parent groups and other activists that calls itself the California Peace Coalition was formed recently by Michael Shellenber­ger, a Berkeley author and activist running for governor as an independen­t.

One critic of California’s progressiv­e policies is Jacqui Berlinn, a legal processing clerk in the East Bay who started Mothers Against Drug Deaths — a name she chose as an homage to the achievemen­ts of Mothers Against Drunk Driving founder Candace Lightner, a Fair Oaks housewife whose 13-year-old daughter was killed in 1980 by a driver under the influence.

Berlinn’s son, Corey, 30, has used heroin and fentanyl for seven years on the streets of San Francisco. “My son isn’t trash,” Berlinn said. “He deserves to get his life back.”

She believes the city’s decision not to charge dealers has allowed openair narcotics markets to flourish in certain neighborho­ods and have enabled drug use, rather than encouraged people dealing with addiction to get help.

In April, Berlinn’s group spent $25,000 to erect a billboard in the upscale retail district of Union Square. Over a glowing night shot of the Golden Gate Bridge, the sign says: “Famous the world over for our brains, beauty and, now, dirtcheap fentanyl.”

This month, the group installed a sign along Interstate 80 heading into Sacramento that targets Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. Playing off signage used at parks, the billboard features a “Welcome to Camp Fentanyl” greeting against a shot of a homeless encampment. The group said a mobile billboard will also circle the state Capitol for an undisclose­d period.

Mothers Against Drug Deaths is calling for more options and funding for drug treatment and more arrests of dealers. The latter would mark a sharp turn from the gospel of “harm reduction,” a public health approach embraced by state and local officials that holds abstention as unrealisti­c. Instead, this strategy calls for helping people dealing with addiction stay safe through things like needle exchanges and naloxone, an overdose reversal drug that has saved thousands of lives.

The parent movement echoes recall efforts happening in two major cities. Progressiv­e prosecutor­s Chesa Boudin in San Francisco and George Gascón in Los Angeles have veered away from throwing street dealers in jail, which they call a pointless game of whacka-mole that punishes poor minorities.

California lawmakers are wary of repeating the mistakes of the war-ondrugs era and have blocked a series of bills that would stiffen penalties for fentanyl sales. They say the legislatio­n would accomplish little apart from packing the state’s jails and prisons.

“We can throw people in jail for a thousand years, and it won’t keep people from doing drugs, and it won’t keep them from dying,” said state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco. “We know that from experience.”

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at Kaiser Family Foundation, an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation. This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editoriall­y independen­t service of the California Health Care Foundation.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? A new controvers­ial billboard that warns against Fentanyl is posted on the side of a building near Union Square in San Francisco on April 4.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES A new controvers­ial billboard that warns against Fentanyl is posted on the side of a building near Union Square in San Francisco on April 4.

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