Opioids Entering US By Mail

Eman

Master
Deadly synthetic opioids are streaming into the United States amid a flood of mail that arrives unscreened from abroad every day, overwhelming the Postal Service and fueling the drug epidemic gripping much of the country, security experts and Massachusetts lawmakers say.

Nearly 1 million packages a day enter the country without any advance electronic information that might flag the presence of dangerous opioids such as fentanyl, much of which is manufactured in China, said Juliette Kayyem, a former assistant Homeland Security secretary.

An estimated 340 million pieces of mail each year pass unchecked through the Postal Service and US Customs without the prior electronic screening that was authorized by Congress 14 years ago but has yet to be fully implemented, Kayyem said.

The problem “is as disruptive to our country as any terrorist act has been” said Kayyem, who teaches at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

In 2015, Massachusetts ranked second per capita in synthetic-opioid deaths, which include fentanyl, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of such deaths in the state increased 109 percent from 2014 to 2015, the report said.

The scourge of fentanyl is still growing in Massachusetts. The drug has been found this year in three-quarters of overdose victims who had a toxicology test after their deaths, according to the state Department of Public Health.

Through September, as many as 1,475 opioid-related deaths had been confirmed or suspected in the state, a number on pace to break last year’s total of 1,759.

Much of the synthetic opioids that find their way into the United States — including fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin — originate in China but come through Mexico, where they are processed and packaged by drug cartels before being smuggled into the United States, federal officials say.

But a significant amount is bought by American users on the so-called dark web, a term for Internet sites that sell illegal products and then ship them directly from overseas and through the US mail, according to the experts.

For this, many buyers need no more than a computer, a click of a mouse, and delivery to their mailboxes.

The ease of using US mail to ship illicit drugs was tested in 2015 by the consulting firm LegitScript, which made 29 purchases from illegal online pharmacies, mostly in India. All 29 of the packages were delivered by the Postal Service after failing to be intercepted by customs.

Currently, much mail received from 191 foreign postal services, including China, Russia, and India, does not contain basic data such as the sender’s name, an address, and the package’s contents, according to Americans for Securing All Packages, a nonpartisan organization. (Kayyem serves as senior adviser for the group.)

Such data can be used to flag a package shipped from a suspicious or known illegal supplier. Once in the United States, officials said, the package stands a better chance to be plucked from the mail stream.

The national response to opioid-related deaths has been lagging, critics say. In 2002, Congress authorized the Customs Service to receive basic advance data on all incoming international mail. But since then, only private carriers such as Federal Express and United Parcel Service have conformed, Kayyem said.

‘Donald Trump will need to understand that you cannot just build a wall to keep fentanyl out of America.’

“There is a lot of money to be made,” she said. In addition to opioids, security officials are concerned about hazardous materials and counterfeit goods that are slipping through.

David Partenheimer, a Postal Service spokesman, wrote in an e-mail to the Globe that the agency does receive advance electronic data on international shipments from “multiple countries, including China.”

However, Partenheimer did not specify what details are received, how they are used, or what percentage of mail from large countries such as China, Russia, and India contain this information.

“The Postal Service shares the goal of those calling for expanding efforts to keep dangerous drugs out of the US mail system,” Partenheimer wrote.

To bolster screenings, Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat from Springfield, co-sponsored a bipartisan bill in September that would require advance electronic data — instead of merely authorizing the collection of such information — before packages enter the United States.

“This is one of those fascinating issues that unites Democrats and Republicans,” Neal said.

“It’s got the potential to equip the Postal Service and investigative agencies with the tools that they’re going to need.”

Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts, a Democrat who called fentanyl “the Godzilla of opioids” in an interview, also is working to curb the drug’s entry into the United States.

He and Senator Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, secured approval of a resolution from the Foreign Relations Committee that calls on the US government to make the issue of illicit fentanyl “of the highest importance in our relations with China and Mexico,” Markey said.

“We’re going to need a much closer working partnership with the Mexican and Chinese governments if we are going to be successful, and they need to understand that we mean business,” he said.

The senator said he also is crafting a bill to provide the Customs Service with high-tech equipment and more scientists to detect fentanyl on the spot.

Neal said the fentanyl trade probably is being promoted by gangs and criminal syndicates as part of China’s vast underground economy.

If his bill is approved, Neal said, he is hopeful that the Drug Enforcement Administration “and other investigative agencies here can work with their counterparts overseas to undertake this in more of a preventive manner.”

In the meantime, the congressman said, “There is a long way to go.”
 
This entire war on drugs is a total waste of time and money. As soon as we implement a new system to stop its entry, the cartels and manufacturers of these opioids create a new means of bypassing this system. This game of cat and mouse has been going on for a long time and we are losing. It's unfortunate but there it is. Those who want to use will find a way and when there's trillions of dollars at stake, they will always create some new, ingenious way to transport it.

Every time we pop a "kingpin" another steps up to take their place and they learn a little more about how not to get caught. Not to be negative, it's just a losing battle. Let those who want to destroy their lives do so, it is their right. It's our responsibility to nip this in the bud by doing our best to teach our own children morals and values so they don't choose to go down that road in the first place.
 
Deadly synthetic opioids are streaming into the United States amid a flood of mail that arrives unscreened from abroad every day, overwhelming the Postal Service and fueling the drug epidemic gripping much of the country, security experts and Massachusetts lawmakers say.

Nearly 1 million packages a day enter the country without any advance electronic information that might flag the presence of dangerous opioids such as fentanyl, much of which is manufactured in China, said Juliette Kayyem, a former assistant Homeland Security secretary.

An estimated 340 million pieces of mail each year pass unchecked through the Postal Service and US Customs without the prior electronic screening that was authorized by Congress 14 years ago but has yet to be fully implemented, Kayyem said.

The problem “is as disruptive to our country as any terrorist act has been” said Kayyem, who teaches at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

In 2015, Massachusetts ranked second per capita in synthetic-opioid deaths, which include fentanyl, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of such deaths in the state increased 109 percent from 2014 to 2015, the report said.

The scourge of fentanyl is still growing in Massachusetts. The drug has been found this year in three-quarters of overdose victims who had a toxicology test after their deaths, according to the state Department of Public Health.

Through September, as many as 1,475 opioid-related deaths had been confirmed or suspected in the state, a number on pace to break last year’s total of 1,759.

Much of the synthetic opioids that find their way into the United States — including fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin — originate in China but come through Mexico, where they are processed and packaged by drug cartels before being smuggled into the United States, federal officials say.

But a significant amount is bought by American users on the so-called dark web, a term for Internet sites that sell illegal products and then ship them directly from overseas and through the US mail, according to the experts.

For this, many buyers need no more than a computer, a click of a mouse, and delivery to their mailboxes.

The ease of using US mail to ship illicit drugs was tested in 2015 by the consulting firm LegitScript, which made 29 purchases from illegal online pharmacies, mostly in India. All 29 of the packages were delivered by the Postal Service after failing to be intercepted by customs.

Currently, much mail received from 191 foreign postal services, including China, Russia, and India, does not contain basic data such as the sender’s name, an address, and the package’s contents, according to Americans for Securing All Packages, a nonpartisan organization. (Kayyem serves as senior adviser for the group.)

Such data can be used to flag a package shipped from a suspicious or known illegal supplier. Once in the United States, officials said, the package stands a better chance to be plucked from the mail stream.

The national response to opioid-related deaths has been lagging, critics say. In 2002, Congress authorized the Customs Service to receive basic advance data on all incoming international mail. But since then, only private carriers such as Federal Express and United Parcel Service have conformed, Kayyem said.

‘Donald Trump will need to understand that you cannot just build a wall to keep fentanyl out of America.’

“There is a lot of money to be made,” she said. In addition to opioids, security officials are concerned about hazardous materials and counterfeit goods that are slipping through.

David Partenheimer, a Postal Service spokesman, wrote in an e-mail to the Globe that the agency does receive advance electronic data on international shipments from “multiple countries, including China.”

However, Partenheimer did not specify what details are received, how they are used, or what percentage of mail from large countries such as China, Russia, and India contain this information.

“The Postal Service shares the goal of those calling for expanding efforts to keep dangerous drugs out of the US mail system,” Partenheimer wrote.

To bolster screenings, Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat from Springfield, co-sponsored a bipartisan bill in September that would require advance electronic data — instead of merely authorizing the collection of such information — before packages enter the United States.

“This is one of those fascinating issues that unites Democrats and Republicans,” Neal said.

“It’s got the potential to equip the Postal Service and investigative agencies with the tools that they’re going to need.”

Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts, a Democrat who called fentanyl “the Godzilla of opioids” in an interview, also is working to curb the drug’s entry into the United States.

He and Senator Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, secured approval of a resolution from the Foreign Relations Committee that calls on the US government to make the issue of illicit fentanyl “of the highest importance in our relations with China and Mexico,” Markey said.

“We’re going to need a much closer working partnership with the Mexican and Chinese governments if we are going to be successful, and they need to understand that we mean business,” he said.

The senator said he also is crafting a bill to provide the Customs Service with high-tech equipment and more scientists to detect fentanyl on the spot.

Neal said the fentanyl trade probably is being promoted by gangs and criminal syndicates as part of China’s vast underground economy.

If his bill is approved, Neal said, he is hopeful that the Drug Enforcement Administration “and other investigative agencies here can work with their counterparts overseas to undertake this in more of a preventive manner.”

In the meantime, the congressman said, “There is a long way to go.”
you know I'm from MA and it is no joke brother. it's hard for me to be sympathetic for personal reasons but it's out of control. narcan dosing has been going up to 4 shots per call as of recent,
because of the synthetic opioids. one of my cousins had 5 and she is still lucky she came back. one of my other cousins was working the fire house when the call came in. she wouldn't have had the special treatment otherwise. welcome to the south shore, Massachusetts.

the whole thing is fucked.
 

I'm very happy this drug is becoming more available... It's very disappointing to me that there is any opposition to this drug. The Governor of Maine was very opposed to allowing this drug to be provided to the public... It boggles the mind.
 
Sisters boyfriend is an EMT... some needing 7-11 shots.. can you believe that shit? Each one of them pop up eventually trying to fight. They're allowed to fight back, must be fun.

@Eman I'd take the drug away too. Fuck that. They know they can overdose and be brought back 99% of the time. Just a reason to have a blast and then be recovered for free, fuck that.
 
I'm very happy this drug is becoming more available... It's very disappointing to me that there is any opposition to this drug. The Governor of Maine was very opposed to allowing this drug to be provided to the public... It boggles the mind.
considering the cost, I agree. they price it way to high though, much like epi pens.

Maine's governor is crazy. in all honesty he isn't half bad at fiscal reform but when it comes to social issues, haha. yeah....

@Thenewera
7-11 shots! I think we have a limit in MA. it seemed like 2 was the most they would give. once the synthetics hit it jumped to 3/4. i think what they are finding is the later takes so much more time to remove itself from the receptors, warranting another shot or two.

we have a section of Boston called 'methadone mile'. it's right off 93 on mass ave & melena cass. if you want to scare the shit out of your local cub scouts and watch them grown up sober being them to the mile.
 
This entire war on drugs is a total waste of time and money. As soon as we implement a new system to stop its entry, the cartels and manufacturers of these opioids create a new means of bypassing this system. This game of cat and mouse has been going on for a long time and we are losing. It's unfortunate but there it is. Those who want to use will find a way and when there's trillions of dollars at stake, they will always create some new, ingenious way to transport it.

Every time we pop a "kingpin" another steps up to take their place and they learn a little more about how not to get caught. Not to be negative, it's just a losing battle. Let those who want to destroy their lives do so, it is their right. It's our responsibility to nip this in the bud by doing our best to teach our own children morals and values so they don't choose to go down that road in the first place.

Yep, a big +1!

Here's a funny thing from the original @Eman (and I know you're just quoting) piece:

"Currently, much mail received from 191 foreign postal services, including China, Russia, and India, does not contain basic data such as the sender’s name, an address, and the package’s contents, according to Americans for Securing All Packages, a nonpartisan organization. (Kayyem serves as senior adviser for the group.)

Such data can be used to flag a package shipped from a suspicious or known illegal supplier. Once in the United States, officials said, the package stands a better chance to be plucked from the mail stream."

Of course the foreign sender is going to use his real name, his real address, and an exact description of actual contents.... Fook me, some people are so dumb it's a marvel that they know how to breathe.

This is going to make things just worse:

"a bipartisan bill in September that would require advance electronic data — instead of merely authorizing the collection of such information — before packages enter the United States.
“This is one of those fascinating issues that unites Democrats and Republicans,” Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat from Springfield said."

So now all countries in the world will have to electronically tag their envelopes and parcels prior to shipping?

Be really scared when Democrats and Republicans unite around anything - when Dems (Big Sis busybody ninnies) unite with the GOP (Big Enforcement fans) nothing good will come out of it. Let's hope Trump tells them to stuff it.
 
@Eman I'd take the drug away too. Fuck that. They know they can overdose and be brought back 99% of the time. Just a reason to have a blast and then be recovered for free, fuck that.

It's saving lives my friend... I can't see how there is a debate.

Let me elaborate more though, I've struggled with addiction in the past. These drugs turn you into someone you are not. You lose control over everything. You do things you never thought you'd never ever do. Eventually, hopefully, you snap out of it and get help.

A drug like narcan is the equivalent of a second, third, etc chance to get that help. If it were your son or daughter that were in that position of needing help, I'm sure you'd support as many chances to get it as you could.
 
It's saving lives my friend... I can't see how there is a debate.

Let me elaborate more though, I've struggled with addiction in the past. These drugs turn you into someone you are not. You lose control over everything. You do things you never thought you'd never ever do. Eventually, hopefully, you snap out of it and get help.

A drug like narcan is the equivalent of a second, third, etc chance to get that help. If it were your son or daughter that were in that position of needing help, I'm sure you'd support as many chances to get it as you could.
That's the only argument I can't argue because people like you who've been in the situation and now you're someone I call a friend. It's a hard debate. I say the first time should be a warning, second a fine and rehab, third jail. That's a statement I've made many times.

And yes, 7-11 shots no shit.
 
That's the only argument I can't argue because people like you who've been in the situation and now you're someone I call a friend. It's a hard debate. I say the first time should be a warning, second a fine and rehab, third jail. That's a statement I've made many times.

And yes, 7-11 shots no shit.

I don't think any drug users are getting wrecked and banking on narcan to make everything okay in the end... Junkies don't look that far ahead. The priorities are get high and where to get more drugs, that is about it. I see your point though and I agree, it could turn into a slippery slope.

One of the biggest problems with the war on drugs IMO is treating addicts like criminals. Although sending some addicts to jail may help them, it is usually the beginning of a vicious circle... Treating addicts like people who need help is much more optimal... And an addict, a dying addict in particular, is someone that needs help.
 
Yep, a big +1!

Here's a funny thing from the original @Eman (and I know you're just quoting) piece:

"Currently, much mail received from 191 foreign postal services, including China, Russia, and India, does not contain basic data such as the sender’s name, an address, and the package’s contents, according to Americans for Securing All Packages, a nonpartisan organization. (Kayyem serves as senior adviser for the group.)

Such data can be used to flag a package shipped from a suspicious or known illegal supplier. Once in the United States, officials said, the package stands a better chance to be plucked from the mail stream."

Of course the foreign sender is going to use his real name, his real address, and an exact description of actual contents.... Fook me, some people are so dumb it's a marvel that they know how to breathe.

This is going to make things just worse:

"a bipartisan bill in September that would require advance electronic data — instead of merely authorizing the collection of such information — before packages enter the United States.
“This is one of those fascinating issues that unites Democrats and Republicans,” Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat from Springfield said."

So now all countries in the world will have to electronically tag their envelopes and parcels prior to shipping?

Be really scared when Democrats and Republicans unite around anything - when Dems (Big Sis busybody ninnies) unite with the GOP (Big Enforcement fans) nothing good will come out of it. Let's hope Trump tells them to stuff it.
Good luck now that Trump will be in office soon. This means steroids from China may also get caught up in this too.
 
Deadly synthetic opioids are streaming into the United States amid a flood of mail that arrives unscreened from abroad every day, overwhelming the Postal Service and fueling the drug epidemic gripping much of the country, security experts and Massachusetts lawmakers say.

Nearly 1 million packages a day enter the country without any advance electronic information that might flag the presence of dangerous opioids such as fentanyl, much of which is manufactured in China, said Juliette Kayyem, a former assistant Homeland Security secretary.

An estimated 340 million pieces of mail each year pass unchecked through the Postal Service and US Customs without the prior electronic screening that was authorized by Congress 14 years ago but has yet to be fully implemented, Kayyem said.

The problem “is as disruptive to our country as any terrorist act has been” said Kayyem, who teaches at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

In 2015, Massachusetts ranked second per capita in synthetic-opioid deaths, which include fentanyl, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of such deaths in the state increased 109 percent from 2014 to 2015, the report said.

The scourge of fentanyl is still growing in Massachusetts. The drug has been found this year in three-quarters of overdose victims who had a toxicology test after their deaths, according to the state Department of Public Health.

Through September, as many as 1,475 opioid-related deaths had been confirmed or suspected in the state, a number on pace to break last year’s total of 1,759.

Much of the synthetic opioids that find their way into the United States — including fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin — originate in China but come through Mexico, where they are processed and packaged by drug cartels before being smuggled into the United States, federal officials say.

But a significant amount is bought by American users on the so-called dark web, a term for Internet sites that sell illegal products and then ship them directly from overseas and through the US mail, according to the experts.

For this, many buyers need no more than a computer, a click of a mouse, and delivery to their mailboxes.

The ease of using US mail to ship illicit drugs was tested in 2015 by the consulting firm LegitScript, which made 29 purchases from illegal online pharmacies, mostly in India. All 29 of the packages were delivered by the Postal Service after failing to be intercepted by customs.

Currently, much mail received from 191 foreign postal services, including China, Russia, and India, does not contain basic data such as the sender’s name, an address, and the package’s contents, according to Americans for Securing All Packages, a nonpartisan organization. (Kayyem serves as senior adviser for the group.)

Such data can be used to flag a package shipped from a suspicious or known illegal supplier. Once in the United States, officials said, the package stands a better chance to be plucked from the mail stream.

The national response to opioid-related deaths has been lagging, critics say. In 2002, Congress authorized the Customs Service to receive basic advance data on all incoming international mail. But since then, only private carriers such as Federal Express and United Parcel Service have conformed, Kayyem said.

‘Donald Trump will need to understand that you cannot just build a wall to keep fentanyl out of America.’

“There is a lot of money to be made,” she said. In addition to opioids, security officials are concerned about hazardous materials and counterfeit goods that are slipping through.

David Partenheimer, a Postal Service spokesman, wrote in an e-mail to the Globe that the agency does receive advance electronic data on international shipments from “multiple countries, including China.”

However, Partenheimer did not specify what details are received, how they are used, or what percentage of mail from large countries such as China, Russia, and India contain this information.

“The Postal Service shares the goal of those calling for expanding efforts to keep dangerous drugs out of the US mail system,” Partenheimer wrote.

To bolster screenings, Representative Richard Neal, a Democrat from Springfield, co-sponsored a bipartisan bill in September that would require advance electronic data — instead of merely authorizing the collection of such information — before packages enter the United States.

“This is one of those fascinating issues that unites Democrats and Republicans,” Neal said.

“It’s got the potential to equip the Postal Service and investigative agencies with the tools that they’re going to need.”

Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts, a Democrat who called fentanyl “the Godzilla of opioids” in an interview, also is working to curb the drug’s entry into the United States.

He and Senator Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, secured approval of a resolution from the Foreign Relations Committee that calls on the US government to make the issue of illicit fentanyl “of the highest importance in our relations with China and Mexico,” Markey said.

“We’re going to need a much closer working partnership with the Mexican and Chinese governments if we are going to be successful, and they need to understand that we mean business,” he said.

The senator said he also is crafting a bill to provide the Customs Service with high-tech equipment and more scientists to detect fentanyl on the spot.

Neal said the fentanyl trade probably is being promoted by gangs and criminal syndicates as part of China’s vast underground economy.

If his bill is approved, Neal said, he is hopeful that the Drug Enforcement Administration “and other investigative agencies here can work with their counterparts overseas to undertake this in more of a preventive manner.”

In the meantime, the congressman said, “There is a long way to go.”

On the upside it's keeping the post office busy.
 
I don't think any drug users are getting wrecked and banking on narcan to make everything okay in the end... Junkies don't look that far ahead. The priorities are get high and where to get more drugs, that is about it. I see your point though and I agree, it could turn into a slippery slope.

One of the biggest problems with the war on drugs IMO is treating addicts like criminals. Although sending some addicts to jail may help them, it is usually the beginning of a vicious circle... Treating addicts like people who need help is much more optimal... And an addict, a dying addict in particular, is someone that needs help.
Maybe not, but maybe so. If you've been brought back like it's nothing wouldn't you be a little more reckless? I also agree with the straight to jail part, but inside jail they could be forced to go straight to community service, and pick a study to keep them occupied.
 
I almost died from Fent nasal spray..
Nothing like it.
The fear of dieing will not stop you once you start on Fent. You will literally give up everything you care about. I would have traded my house for more. Narcan will only give a dad or a son another chance to see what is happening. Because they can't see their self once they start Fent. We have only seen the start of this thing.
I had a family intervention, 10 cops with shot guns surrounding me, and taking me to get help made me see, that even though I thought I was fine, (I just needed time I would say) I did not want this for my son.
I am free from the monster, but I would drive all night to get it.
Coming off, make every thing else feel like childs play...

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk
 
Ps. let me add, I didn't get on Fent to party. I got on for pain. And it seemed like a miracle!!!
I had used lots of 100 mcg patches. I mean a lot. I shot plenty of Dilaudid. Was on 180 to 300 pills hydros and oxy for 10 years. So I thought I knew every thing I needed to know about Fent. WRONG!!!!
I had no idea what I was getting into.
I am a business owner, and a family man. Happily married with 4 kids, that all love me.
I have not been to a party in over 20 years. I don't drink.
Definitely not your run of the mill addict.
But it got me.....
My wife was beginning me to stop, my kids thought I was going to die. Every one did.
My wife drove across the state line to get a narcan pen ( you can't buy them at the pharmacy in my state). She would find me in the middle of the night, standing, blood red, sweat running down me in streams.
Or laying in the floor in a fetal position, unable to move for hours.
I have about 2 weeks to a month that I can't remember at all.
You don't have to be a guy living under a bridge to get in a crisis situation. Yes narcan should be easy to get. And you would feel the same if your son or dad was caught up in the madness....

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk
 
Synthetic drugs out of China are what we have to be most concerned about, especially guys who order raw.
 
And the drug dealers who don't give a fuck about processing the stuff correctly! Some of them are simply dry diluting/ mixing the fentanyl in a matrix leaving hot spots.

Or they will knowingly sell fantanyl as heroin purposely mislabeling it because it is cheaper.

You snort a bump from a hot spot and you OD!
 
Ps. let me add, I didn't get on Fent to party. I got on for pain. And it seemed like a miracle!!!
I had used lots of 100 mcg patches. I mean a lot. I shot plenty of Dilaudid. Was on 180 to 300 pills hydros and oxy for 10 years. So I thought I knew every thing I needed to know about Fent. WRONG!!!!
I had no idea what I was getting into.
I am a business owner, and a family man. Happily married with 4 kids, that all love me.
I have not been to a party in over 20 years. I don't drink.
Definitely not your run of the mill addict.
But it got me.....
My wife was beginning me to stop, my kids thought I was going to die. Every one did.
My wife drove across the state line to get a narcan pen ( you can't buy them at the pharmacy in my state). She would find me in the middle of the night, standing, blood red, sweat running down me in streams.
Or laying in the floor in a fetal position, unable to move for hours.
I have about 2 weeks to a month that I can't remember at all.
You don't have to be a guy living under a bridge to get in a crisis situation. Yes narcan should be easy to get. And you would feel the same if your son or dad was caught up in the madness....

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk

Sounds like what happened to a friend of mine. Well educated and a business owner. Had a car wreck and got put on Oxycontin back in the mid 90's, became a drug addict and never got better. He died back in 2014 in his early 50's.

I shot plenty of Dilaudid and fentanyl patches back in the day, too. I struggled with opiate addiction for a lot of years. In the spring of 2017 will be five years clean for me.

I can confirm it changes who you are dramatically. I was a horrible person when I was using.
 
Top