Texarkana Gazette

Powerful opioid suspected in death of 10-year-old boy

- By Jennifer Kay and Curt Anderson

MIAMI—A 10-year-old boy from a drug-ridden Miami neighborho­od apparently died of a fentanyl overdose last month, becoming one of Florida’s littlest victims of the opioid crisis, authoritie­s said Tuesday. But how he came into contact with the powerful painkiller is a mystery.

Fifth-grader Alton Banks died June 23 after a visit to the pool in the city’s Overtown section. He began vomiting at home, was found unconsciou­s that evening and was pronounced dead at a hospital. Preliminar­y toxicology tests showed he had fentanyl in his system, authoritie­s said.

“We don’t believe he got it at his home,” Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said. “It could be as simple as touching it. It could have been a towel at the pool.” She added: “We just don’t know.” The case has underscore­d how frightenin­gly prevalent fentanyl has become—and how potent it is. Exposure to just tiny amounts can be devastatin­g.

Investigat­ors said Alton may been exposed to the drug on his walk home in Overtown, a poor, high-crime neighborho­od where Assistant Miami Fire Chief Pete Gomez said he has seen a spike in overdoses in the past year and where needles sometimes litter the streets.

“There is an epidemic,” Gomez said. “Overtown seems to have the highest percentage of where these incidents are occurring.”

The three-block walk between the pool and Alton’s home took him down streets that appeared relatively clean Tuesday, but on the block in the other direction from his home, trash littered the pavement and empty lots. Homeless people slept in the shade of an Interstate 95 overpass.

Detectives are still trying to piece together the boy’s final day. Rundle appealed to the public for informatio­n.

“This is of such great importance. We need to solve this case,” she said. “I believe this may be the youngest victim of this scourge in our community.”

The boy’s mother, Shantell Banks, was informed of the preliminar­y findings last week. A distraught Banks told The Miami Herald that her son was a “fun kid” who wanted to become an engineer and loved the NFL’s Carolina Panthers, especially Cam Newton.

Jessie Davis, who lives in an apartment house next to the building where Alton lived, said her grandchild­ren, ages 8, 9 and 10, regularly make the same walk to the nearby park with a swimming pool. She said she initially thought the pool water made Alton sick and was shocked by news reports that he had been exposed to fentanyl.

“Where would a 10-year-old baby get something like that?” Davis said.

Thinking about her own grandchild­ren going to the pool, Davis said, “I’m going to tell them, ‘Don’t touch nothing.’ I don’t know whether they think it’s candy, but somebody needs to tell these kids something.”

The Florida Department of Children and Families said it is conducting its own investigat­ion, in addition to that of the police.

Fentanyl is a synthetic painkiller that has been used for decades to treat cancer patients and others in severe pain. But recently it has been front-and-center in the U.S. opioid abuse crisis.

Perhaps best known as the drug that killed pop star Prince, it is many times stronger than heroin.

Dealers often mix it with heroin, a combinatio­n that has often proved lethal.

Fentanyl is so powerful that some police department­s have warned officers not to even touch it.

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