Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lethal Fentanyl Profiting Gangs In Western Canada While Deaths Climb

The Canadian Press, 07 Aug, 2015 12:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — The powerful opioid fentanyl, recently linked to an outbreak of overdose deaths in Western Canada, appears to be flowing along a well-worn drug trafficking route — killing some of its users in the same way tainted ecstasy did before.
     
    Authorities theorize the potent painkiller is being imported from Asia to the West Coast, then moved to the black market in B.C. and Alberta by organized crime groups.
     
    Policing has largely centred around public warnings and education campaigns to prevent overdoses, while investigations are at such an early stage that officers haven't yet uncovered any pill manufacturing operations. 
     
    It's a pattern reminiscent of early 2012, when investigators were probing the source of batches of ecstasy mixed with an unknown, lethal additive as deaths stacked up.
     
    "I think there is something of a trade route, and it's one we saw in place at the time of ecstasy-lacing," said Simon Fraser University criminologist Rob Gordon.
     
    Over the past two weeks, police in Metro Vancouver have linked four overdose deaths to fentanyl. Authorities and health officials say that many using the drug don't know what they're taking.
     
    Fentanyl produces a euphoric high and pain relief, while overdosing can cause blood pressure to plummet, slowed breathing, deep sleep, coma or death.
     
    A couple in their early 30s died in their North Vancouver home on July 20, while a 17-year-old boy and 31-year-old man each died separately last weekend.
     
    It's believed the victims either thought they were taking OxyContin, or using illegal drugs spiked with the fentanyl, said Jane Buxton, at the B.C. Centre for Disease Control.
     
    More than 500 people have died under similar circumstances across B.C. and Alberta since 2013, with a spike in the past year.
     
    Fentanyl's debut on the underground market was largely related to a manufacturing change that prevented  OxyContin from being crushed for snorting or smoking, said a spokesman for Alberta's ALERT integrated policing unit.
     
    Mike Tucker said that opened a void that crime bosses began exploiting, by selling fentanyl as fake OxyContin or heroin — yet it's up to 100 times more toxic than morphine.
     
    Much of the supply is believed to originate from China and possibly Turkey as a cheap raw powder that gangs in Canada press into pills, he said. It lands on the streets in a form known as "fake 80s" or "greenies."
     
    The drug's appearance is new enough that investigators are still digging to reach the root of distribution channels, said Tucker.
     
    "I would guess that most of the fentanyl we're seeing is coming from British Columbia, and that could be a stop on a shipping route or something," said Tucker, noting ALERT seized 18,000 pills in 2014 compared with no seizures the year earlier.
     
    "We still don't know enough about the sources."
     
     
    But police do say multiple gangs are involved and they're cashing in on low production overheads, said Sgt. Lindsey Houghton, with B.C.'s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit.
     
    "Fentanyl is not being made here, it's being made elsewhere ... then coming to here and then it gets into the hands of the people who mix it in their bathtub and put in some blue dye or green dye and get a pill press and make it into fake Oxy," he said.
     
    Pills can sell upwards of $50 to $100 on the street in some communities, he added.
     
    "You can make a lot more money mixing fentanyl in with (other substances) then trying to sell heroin or coke."
     
    Tucker said the pills wholesale in Alberta for about $12, but can be sold on the street for anywhere from $25 to $80.
     
    Some busts have revealed possible cross-provincial networks of operations.
     
    In March, ALERT warned fentanyl was being shipped from Alberta to B.C. and Saskatchewan using hidden compartments inside sport utility vehicles.
     
    Gordon said the drug is flowing along the traditional north-Pacific trade route that's shared by other drugs like ecstasy and marijuana.
     
    "There are well-established close ties between groups in Alberta and groups in B.C. with respect to the illegal drug trade. They may even be the same people," he said.
     
    The RCMP is co-ordinating investigations at a national level.
     
    Buxton said a new study, plus anecdotal evidence from recent deaths, points to the likelihood people dying don't know the source of their high.
     
    "It's so cross-cutting, from your healthy, sporty teenager to a couple with a young child, to people who are using drugs regularly."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toddler Found Dead In Victoria Hotel Died Of Natural Causes: BC Coroners Service

    Toddler Found Dead In Victoria Hotel Died Of Natural Causes: BC Coroners Service
    The service says 18-month-old Saam Zohrevand — also known as Saam Darya — developed both a lung infection and bacterial meningitis.

    Toddler Found Dead In Victoria Hotel Died Of Natural Causes: BC Coroners Service

    Homeless In Abbotsford Not Responsible For Defecating In Parks: Lawyer

    Homeless In Abbotsford Not Responsible For Defecating In Parks: Lawyer
    The City of Abbotsford is wrong to blame the homeless for defecating in public spaces after dumping chicken manure at encampments in an effort to evict people, a lawyer has argued

    Homeless In Abbotsford Not Responsible For Defecating In Parks: Lawyer

    Russia's Arctic Claim To North Pole To Put Political Heat On Canada, Expert

    Russia's Arctic Claim To North Pole To Put Political Heat On Canada, Expert
    A defence expert says Russia's new bid for a vast swath of Arctic territory, including the North Pole, backs Canada into an uncomfortable corner in future negotiations over the frozen region.

    Russia's Arctic Claim To North Pole To Put Political Heat On Canada, Expert

    B.C. First Nation Makes Cash, Land Agreement In Steps Towards Treaty

    B.C. First Nation Makes Cash, Land Agreement In Steps Towards Treaty
    TERRACE, B.C. — The Kitselas First Nation has signed multimillion-dollar cash and land agreement-in-principle with the provincial government.

    B.C. First Nation Makes Cash, Land Agreement In Steps Towards Treaty

    Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island

    Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island
    A resident of a small community on Cape Breton's west coast says about 25 people rallied to try and save 16 beached pilot whales today after they became stuck on the rocky shores of St. George's Bay.

    Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island

    Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake

    Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake
    The body of a teenager has been pulled from a lake in northwestern B.C., ending a nearly week-long search.

    Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake