The Mercury News

Drugs found where Fallon Middle School worker died

- By Angela Ruggiero and Nico Savidge Staff writer George Kelly contribute­d to this report.

DUBLIN>> Investigat­ors found the powerful opiate fentanyl at the Dublin middle school where a man died and a woman working with him on the school’s cleaning staff was hospitaliz­ed earlier this week, police said Thursday.

The two adults who worked as custodians at Fallon Middle School were reported missing Wednesday morning after not returning home after their shift Tuesday night.

When authoritie­s arrived at the school Wednesday morning about 7 a.m., they found two people unresponsi­ve. A 32-year- old man was pronounced dead and a 29-year- old woman was taken to the hospital for treatment. Police say she’s expected to fully recover.

Dublin police Capt. Nate Schmidt said Thursday that investigat­ors confirmed the presence of the drug fentanyl at the scene. Even a small amount of the drug can be deadly, he said. Investigat­ors have not ruled it a drug overdose; they are waiting on toxicology reports following the autopsy. Police do not believe it to be a murder-suicide attempt.

When officers arrived, they smelled a chemical odor. The Fire Department’s hazardous materials team was called, but found no obvious chemical presence or toxins in the air throughout the school.

Although a sealed chemistry science kit was found in the library, experts confirmed that even if it had been opened and all the chemicals mixed together, the combinatio­n would not have caused a reaction, he said.

The stepfather of the man described him as a caring father to two children.

Dublin Unified interim Superinten­dent Daniel Moirao sent two messages to parents Wednesday, informing them of the man’s death.

“Our deepest sympathies go out to the family and friends of our lost colleague and also to the students, staff and community of Fallon Middle School. No matter how strong the Fallon Mustang family is, losing a family member at any time is tragic, but during this time of year, it is devastatin­g,” Moirao said.

Initially, there was speculatio­n online that the incident may have involved a student, which was not true.

“In situations of this nature, rumors often spread quickly, which can result in additional pain and suffering for the family and friends of those involved,” the superinten­dent said.

He asked the community to avoid speculatio­n and let the police do its jobs.

There were no groups of children on campus at Fallon recently. The district had plans to return to inperson learning as early as Friday. However, given Alameda County’s return to the most restrictiv­e purple tier on the state’s c olor- c o de d COV I D - 1 9 classifica­tion system, reopening will not occur until the county reaches the red tier.

Although students were on winter break, Tuesday was a working day for district staff and custodians were on campus for their regular shifts.

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