Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Stronger meth factors in police non-shooting deaths

- By Brooke Manning

Roy Anthony Scott’s death is not an anomaly.

The Howard Center for Investigat­ive Journalism, working in collaborat­ion with The Associated Press, identified 11 other deaths in non-shooting police encounters in Nevada from 2012-2021. Like Scott — who died in 2019 after an encounter with Las Vegas police — five of the dead had histories of mental illness and meth in their systems at the time of their deaths.

Those findings track broader data on national police deaths. A November 2016 study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine found that 1 in 5 people who died in 20092012 police encounters — the majority of them shootings — showed signs of mental illness or drug-induced disruptive behavior.

Nevada’s largest police force, the Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department, mandated crisis interventi­on training for all officers in 2014 and launched their Behavioral Health Unit (BHU) in 2021. It also invested resources into the opioid crisis by creating an overdose response team and running a public awareness campaign about fentanyl.

But like other police agencies in the U.S., Las Vegas does not have any meth-specific trainings, even as meth has become cheaper and more potent, particular­ly in Nevada. The department’s policies on how to handle people in behavioral crisis call for physical restraint in order to quickly gain compliance. Experts say such tactics may be contributi­ng to the deaths of those on stimulant drugs, like meth, given its stress on the cardiovasc­ular system in concert with the danger of police restraint and the paranoia brought on by the drug.

“That’s the essence of the problem,” explained Richard Stripp, a forensic toxicologi­st and John Jay College of Criminal Justice professor. “The things … law enforcemen­t and health profession­als will do to try to protect other individual­s, to protect themselves and so forth, worsen the issue.”

New, more potent meth

While drugs like opioids and fentanyl dominate the headlines, overdose deaths in the U.S. from stimulant drugs, primarily meth, have risen dramatical­ly, nearly tripling between 2015 and 2019, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Stimulants increase the activity of the brain chemicals dopamine and norepineph­rine. When meth is taken, the body’s systems speed up, blood pressure rises and the heart rate increases. Although the effects of meth begin to wear off in about 12 hours, continued use puts stress on the cardiovasc­ular system in the long term.

Yet the increases in meth use and addiction have been much less dramatic than the increases in overdoses, suggesting something else is making meth more dangerous.

Richard Rawson, previously the co-director of the University of California, Los Angeles, Integrated Substance Abuse Program and an expert in treating people with stimulant use disorder, said that 20 years ago, meth was at most 50 percent pure and less potent. But that has since changed.

“The current methamphet­amine that’s on the street is particular­ly damaging,” Rawson explained, because it nears levels of 100 percent purity and potency.

Today’s meth from Mexico is also produced using different precursor chemicals. This production process, known as the P2P method, isolates the drug’s d-isomer compound that is responsibl­e for the “high” feeling. Meth that’s considered “100 percent potent” is made up almost exclusivel­y of the d-isomer.

“So, the people who are now using methamphet­amine, particular­ly those who are using daily or injecting, are really getting much bigger volumes in their brain and their bodies,” Rawson explained.

When police respond to people who are high on meth, they are more likely to be exhibiting erratic and violent behavior, according to Jamie Ross, executive director of Nevada’s PACT Coalition for Safe and Drug Free Communitie­s, a nonprofit that focuses on substance misuse.

“There is a new and more potent meth,” she said. “When I talk to treatment folks, they say that psychosis is increasing.”

If someone has a mental illness like schizophre­nia, which makes people prone to psychosis, “then meth makes it worse,” he added.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? John Locher
Several non-shooting police fatalities in Vegas involved subjects with a history of mental illness and drugs, mainly meth.
The Associated Press file John Locher Several non-shooting police fatalities in Vegas involved subjects with a history of mental illness and drugs, mainly meth.

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