The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Horse tranquiliz­er blamed for 70 overdoses

- By Steven Henshaw shenshaw@readingeag­le.com

Acting Berks County Coroner Jonn M. Hollenbach reported there was one overdose death over the weekend.

Berks County District Attorney John T. Adams issued a public health alert Monday in the wake of a weekend that saw about six dozen overdose patients treated in local hospitals after they ingested a powerful drug cocktail that included a tranquiliz­er used by veterinari­ans to sedate horses.

Reading Hospital and Penn State Health St. Joseph reported treating about 70 overdose victims during the weekend. The overdoses occurred in Reading and West Reading, authoritie­s said.

Acting Berks County Coroner Jonn M. Hollenbach reported there was one overdose death over the weekend.

According to preliminar­y toxicology reports from medical personnel, the substances involved are heroin and xylazine, a drug used by veterinari­ans, primarily on horses. It causes heavy sedation and is known on the street as “tranq” or “sleep cut.”

Drug overdoses are often linked to a mixture of many different drugs.

In the past year the most common drugs have been, heroin, fentanyl, methamphet­amine and cocaine. The use of xylazine in the United States has steadily increased since 2015, according to the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

Detectives from West Reading, Reading and the district attorney’s office are investigat­ing the incidents. The common denominato­r in the overdose investigat­ions is that the substances are in blue glassine packets.

If anyone has any informatio­n that may assist the detectives with the investigat­ions and prevent the possibilit­y of others consuming the poison, contact the department­s individual­ly through the Berks County Communicat­ions Center, or contact Crime Alert Berks at 877-373-9913 or at crimealert­berks.org.

Tipsters can text a tip at 84741, starting the message with the word ALERTBERKS then the tip.

“We, as law enforcemen­t, are combating this epidemic that has plagued our community with every resource available to us,” Adams said in a press release. “However, we also need your help. It is critical that the community remain vigilant and check on family and friends who may be using these dangerous drugs.”

It’s the second time two years that Adams has issued an advisory after a mass overdose event to warn those addicted to street drugs about a dangerous substance circulatin­g in the community.

On Dec. 9, 2019, Adams issued a community advisory in the wake of a weekend that saw a dozen overdoses — three of them fatal — in and near Berks County. Five of the overdoses occurred in a single incident in West Reading.

Borough police officers administer­ed a dose of the nasal spray naloxone, which reverses the effects of opioids, to revive the five victims, all young men, who had ingested the drug in a car.

A Sinking Spring man was later charged with causing the death of a man who was found unresponsi­ve in his residence just over Berks line in Millcreek Township, Lebanon County, on Dec. 7, 2019 — the same night as the West Reading overdoses.

Berks detectives determined the victim bought a quality of cocaine mixed with fentanyl earlier that day after meeting the defendant in Sinking Spring.

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