Opiates Cast a Cloud over Maple Shade

By Brian Mahoney, Michelle Campbell, & Stephen Harrison | Rowan University Online Journalism II

Alice Silverman was rifling through her son’s clothing drawers looking for something that might fit his childhood friend Ryan, who had been kicked out of his house and needed a place to stay. She had suspected that her son, Danny, had been using drugs for some time now. Her assumption was that he was into the normal stuff, weed and booze, like she had when she was younger, but she was stunned to discover needles and other heroin paraphernalia tucked away in his sock drawer.

Caught off guard and desperately lacking the resources needed to combat the addiction, Danny eventually succumbed when he overdosed on a batch of heroin laced with the exceptionally potent opiate Fentanyl. He was only 19 when he died on October 20th, 2006.

“I don’t really feel like the parents in this town were pro-active back then… maybe they talked to their kids at home, I don’t know, but as far as going to things at night to educate themselves more about, they might think they know it all but they really don’t. Because as kids get older they just get smarter. Generations go by and they come up with more and more technology, it helps them hide things that are… You know we didn’t have cell phones back in the ‘70s.”


The Problem

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Heroin with two forms of paraphernalia: a spoon and a needle (Photo/ Medscape)

The abuse and addiction to opioid drugs such as heroin is a global issue that has a negative impact on the health, social, and economic welfare of all communities. About 36 million people abuse opioids worldwide and 2.1 million people from the United States suffer from substance abuse disorders relating to opioid pain relievers. The catastrophic effects of abuse and overdose has continued to rise. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, “the number of unintentional overdose deaths from prescription pain relievers has soared in the United States, more than quadrupling since 1999.”

Opiates are drugs processed from morphine and extracted from certain poppy plants. Heroin, one of the most popular opiates, comes in a white or brownish powder. It’s street names include Big H, Black Tar, Chiva, Hell Dust, Horse, Negra, Smack, and Thunder. Heroin can be injected, smoked, or sniffed/snorted. Heroin is highly addictive. Its initial surge of euphoria is followed by a twilight state of “sleep and wakefulness.” According to JustThinkTwice.gov, physical symptoms of use include: drowsiness, respiratory depression, constricted pupils, nausea, a warm flushing of the skin, dry mouth, and heavy extremities. If a user is unaware how much actual heroin is being used, it creates a very high risk of overdose. Overdose symptoms include slow and shallow breathing, blue lips and fingernails, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and possible death.


The Statistics

Maple Shade, New Jersey

With a population of just over 19,000 people, there have been forty-seven heroin admissions and eighteen other opiate admissions to New Jersey substance abuse treatment facilities since 2010.

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Source: NJ Division of Addiction Service

New Jersey as a Whole

There have been 5,217 heroin-related deaths recorded in New Jersey since 2004.

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Source: NJ.com | Herointown, NJ

The heroin death-rate in New Jersey (per 100,000) is 8.3%, more than three times the national average. Heroin fatalities now eclipse homicide, suicide, car accidents and AIDS as a cause of death in the state, according to an analysis by NJ Advance Media.

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Source: NJ.com | Herointown, NJ

In New Jersey, there have been 184,038 patients admitted to New Jersey substance abuse treatment facilities for heroin or opioid abuse since 2010. There have been 781 heroin-related deaths in New Jersey in 2014, the fourth straight year the state saw an increase.

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 The United States as a Whole

The United States has seen a steady increase in heroin use. The number of deaths from prescription opioid pain relievers in 2014 is up more than three times the amount in 2001.

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Timelapse 1999-2014: Age-adjusted death rates for drug overdoses per 100,000 population by county and year (Source: data.cdc.gov)


Law-Enforcement

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Lieutenant Jeffrey Hoch of the Maple Shade Police Department (Photo/ Stephen Harrison)

Lt. Jeffrey Hoch of the Maple Shade police department serves as the forces PIO, or public information officer. As a law enforcement agent, he sees the havoc that opiate use can wreak upon a family and the community at large.

“The financial need to support the habit drives the user to commit mostly property crimes to purchase their drugs. We kind of see it start out in stages, initially they’ll start stealing from family members, stealing things that are easy to dispose of which typically is jewelry, going to gold places, so on and so forth. Some then progress once they’re done stealing from their family. Like I said, it progresses in stages, after stealing from the family… they may graduate into stealing low level stuff, you know, milling around at night and going through unlocked cars and stealing items, stealing change, stealing GPS’s, phones from cars, and again things that they can go to places in the cities and trade in quickly for money, and the money is quickly turned into drugs… and then as things progress, and if they still don’t get arrested or someone still doesn’t avert them from the life of drugs then they get into more serious crimes… So we have seen families escalate to that and it’s terrible.”

While new medical devices such as Narcan are proven lifesavers, Lt. Hoch has some ambivalence about them.

“It’s kind of a… we talk about the overdose prevention act and all the good reasons that it’s in play, but the fact that people don’t get charged criminally, there might be some statistics, I don’t know, that would show that that’s a bad thing… If fear of incarceration or fear of monetary fine is what drives somebody to not do something again, we’ve removed that… but again, the important thing is to save lives.”

“Whatever we can do to mitigate it, whether it’s through education or through enforcement, either one the end goal is the same, it is to mitigate the problem.


The Users

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Andrew J. Powell, 23, of Maple Shade (Photo/ South Jersey Times)

Andrew J. Powell was a resident of Maple Shade all his life. He was employed as a mechanic for Tolls Brothers in Morrisville, PA. On January 29, 2012, Powell passed away suddenly due to an overdose on heroin.

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Adam Bush, 30, of Maple Shade (Photo/ SJ Magazine)

Adam Bush struggled with addiction for at least 10 years including several stints in rehab, who overdosed in 2015. According to the Adam Bush Memorial Fund, if you ever encountered Adam, you were instantly drawn to him. “He would instantly light up a room with his smile and immediately make you a friend with his infectious charisma.”

At a candlelight vigil held on August 31, 2016 in Washington Township for International Overdose Awareness Day, Adam’s mother, Michelle Bush said, “No one makes a choice to become an addict. This is a disease. They are normal people. They are our sons, daughters and husbands and wives.”


The Affected

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Alice Silverman, active advocate for drug policy reform and education, lost her son to an overdose in 2006 (Photo/ Stephen Harrison)

Heroin doesn’t just affect the user. It affects the family and friends of the user as well as first-responders. Alice Silverman lost a son to opiate abuse in 2006, and the problem has not gone away for Maple Shade.

“As crazy as this sounds I feel like it’s more normal for your kid to have a drug problem than for your kid to not have a drug problem, because there’s so many kids doing it. We have an epidemic going on right now, it’s not just one kid on the block. I could drive you around this whole town and I could take out my sons and my daughter’s high school yearbooks and tell you which kids are dead, which kids are still using, which kids have recovered, which kids are in jail… It’s just crazy.”

Due to the ease with which public transportation in Maple Shade can get to popular drug buying hotspots in Camden and Philadelphia, people from surrounding communities take advantage of this.

“We’ve had kids from Moorestown, my son told me, and they would park here and they would give the kids from Maple Shade money to go to Camden for them, and they’d throw them money to get their own stuff.”

Silverman remains an active advocate for drug policy reform and education, and was among the activists who challenged Chris Christie to pass the Good Samaritan Emergency Response Act and Overdose Prevention Act.

 


The “Solutions”

In May of 2013, Governor Chris Christie signed into legislation laws that shield people from negative repercussions from the law when they call for medical help in cases dealing with illegal drug abuse.

The Overdose Prevention Act allows people to call for medical help if they witness, or are experiencing a drug overdose, without the fear of being arrested. Pharmacists or doctors who administer “opiate antidote” to people in emergency situations are also protected from prosecution.

The Good Samaritan Emergency Response Act works quite similarly. Individuals who call for emergency help when someone is overdosing will not be held liable for drug use or possession charges. These laws help combat the cases that go unreported and individuals left alone during overdose episodes due to the fear of the law.

Narcan Nasal Spray is the first FDA approved nasal spray life-saving medication that can stop or even reverse the effects of an opioid drug overdose. Narcan is to administered right away at the signs of a drug overdose. This medication is a prescription product, however, there are many states where an individual can purchase Narcan straight from a pharmacist without an individual prescription. This medication does not take the place of emergency medical care and 911 should still be called after administering the spray. Naloxone only used to be offered in injectable forms through a syringe or autoinjector. According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s press release, first responders and caregivers think the nasal spray is easier to use and “people have access to an FDA-approved product for which the drug and its delivery device have met the FDA’s high standards for safety, efficacy and quality.”


Looking Forward

The explosion of opiate use nationwide is not a problem that is unique to Maple Shade, but it is a community that has been hit hard due to the ease with which the drugs can be accessed. Advocates such as Alice Silverman and law enforcement officers such as Lt. Jeffrey Hoch look at the problem from different perspectives, but they both agree that the bottom line is to mitigate the use of opiates and to save lives. A chaplain corps has been organized by the police in an effort to provide counseling and prevention. Alice Silverman has helped Narcan become available within schools and helps provide training in its use. But even Narcan may not be enough when heroin or other opiates are laced with dangerous additives such as Fentanyl, or the newly discovered U-47700, which is a synthetic opioid seven and a half times more powerful than morphine.

Alice Silverman sometimes walks through the graveyard where her son is buried, and has noticed a trend. Newer headstones tend to be black, like her sons, and she’s noticed that their prevalence has been increasing. She suspects that those headstones too belong to young Maple Shade residents whose lives have been cut short.


If you or someone you know are addicted to heroin or opiates, please call Your First Step at 1-855-211-7837 or Addiction Center Philadelphia at (877) 273-5741.

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Header image via YourFirstStep.org

Rowan Lacrosse Club Hosts Memorial Tournament for Fallen Founder

By: Brian Mahoney

Kathy Farrell, Donnie’s mother, is presented with her son’s commemorative jersey at the LAX for Donnie tournament. (The Whit: Staff Photo/ Ethan Stoezer)

GLASSBORO, NJ – The Rowan University Men’s Club Lacrosse team hosted the first annual “LAX for Donnie” Memorial Tournament on Sunday April 19th.

Eight teams were in attendance, some from near, some far. They all came together to play lacrosse to honor Donald Farrell, a founder of the Rowan Lacrosse Club who was killed on Rowan’s campus in 2007.

The eight teams were divided up into two conferences. The “Donnie” Conference consisted of Dickinson College, Monmouth University, Philadelphia University, and Rowan University. The “Farrell” Conference consisted of Atlantic Cape Community College, The College of New Jersey, Drexel University, and Rider University. Each team played the three other teams in their respective conference. The team with the best record in each conference moved on to the championship game. Although LAX for Donnie was a lacrosse tournament, lacrosse was not the focal point of the event. This event was put together to honor and remember Donnie Farrell by playing the sport they all love.

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The Farrell Family (L-R): Luke, Kathy, Donnie, Donald, Aimee, and Caitlin Farrell in 2007

At around 9 p.m. on Saturday October 27, 2007, during Rowan’s Homecoming Week, Donnie and a group of friends were walking toward Triad, an on-campus student apartment complex. In order to get there, they had to cross the intersection of Bowe Boulevard and rowanmap190Route 322. Less than 100 feet from that corner is was a convenience store called XPress Food Mart.

In that vicinity, they were stopped by a group of four or five young men who asked them for directions. While talking, two of the men suddenly and brutally attacked Donnie. Rowan Police responded to the 911 calls in only 90 seconds. By then, however, the assailants had fled with Donnie’s phone and wallet. Donnie was transported to Cooper Hospital in Camden, NJ.

The next morning, Donnie had passed away due to blunt force trauma to the right side of his neck.

Who were the men that killed Donnie? No one knows. They were never found, and after seven years of searching and a $100,000 reward, they still haven’t been found.

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What We Know:

Sex: Male
Race: African American Height: Approx. 5’10”-6’0” Build: Slim, Skinny
Eye Color: Dark
Hair: Braided, Slight “Scruffy” Facial Hair
Nickname: “Smoke”
Last seen wearing a limited edition Coogi Heritage Hoodie

..

More importantly, who was Donnie Farrell? Donnie was a 19-year-old Rowan University sophomore. He grew up and lived in Boonton, NJ and played lacrosse for his high school team, the Mountain Lakes Lakers. He was a straight-A student as well as a founding member of the Rowan University Men’s Club Lacrosse Team.

Donnie #55 with the very first Rowan University Men's Club Lacrosse team in 2007

Donnie #55 with the very first Rowan University Men’s Club Lacrosse team in 2007

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Donnie with his brother Luke

“Our team heard about this murder and we are disgusted at not only the fact that it happened, but at the fact that there is no place on campus to remember him. Our lacrosse team is a family. A family of which all players, both past, present and future, demand the same respect,” said tournament director, Rob Zybrick. “To show our respect to Donnie, and his family, we decided that we needed to give back, that we needed to create a place where Donnie will live on forever.” The team plans on installing a memorial on campus, however It needs to be approved by Rowan University President Ali Houshmand before proceeding with the project.

The tournament was very successful and stayed on schedule to the minute. The Rowan Rec Center allowed the lacrosse team to use Richard Wackar stadium and the Intramural Field. This allowed two games to be played at the same time. The first games began at 8 a.m. and the last game ended at 4 p.m. Many parents, friends, and fans came out to support their respective team and tailgated. Each team had their designated areas to park, where they were able to tailgate. Some teams brought frisbees, footballs, cornhole, etc. to pass the time between games. Many parents brought sandwiches and snacks while others cooked burgers and hotdogs. “Little Beefs” also set up a vendor stand and sold burgers, hot sandwiches, drinks, etc. During the tailgate the Farrell family was able to mingle with current Rowan lacrosse players and parents.

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Rowan Lacrosse players playing cornhole between games at the tailgate.

When noon came around, the LAX for Donnie Ceremony began. The speakers of the ceremony were: Drew D’Elia, Director of Rowan Sport Clubs, Rob Zybrick , Tournament Director & Treasurer of the Rowan Men’s Lacrosse Club, Brian Mahoney, Tournament Director & Social Media/ Marketing Manager of the Rowan Men’s Lacrosse Club, and Kathy Farrell, Mother of Donnie Farrell. During the emotional ceremony, the Farrell Family was presented flowers, tournament shirts, Donnie’s framed lacrosse jersey, and a plaque of the official creation of the “Donnie Farrell Memorial” Scholarship.

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After the ceremony, the games continued. Dickinson College and Drexel University were the two teams that went undefeated in their respective conferences, so they advanced to the championship game.

The two teams lined up at midfield and before the game started there was a moment of silence for Donnie. The National Anthem was then played, sending a chill down the spines of all the players of the field.

The championship game was very close. Dickinson College came back from a two-goal deficit and won 6-5. A bronze plate will be added to the side of the LAX for Donnie trophy.

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The “LAX for Donnie” Championship Trophy

Kathy Farrell said, “I have been waiting, with pain in my heart, for something like this to happen. Donnie loved being at Rowan and he was so very proud to help create the first club lacrosse team.”

Donnie’s father, Donald, followed her comments up and said, “Let’s face it, you guys [the lacrosse team] are complete strangers. For you guys to do something like this is truly amazing. You won’t understand what you guys have done for us until you have kids of your own.”

The team was able to raise $4,725 via their GoFundMe page. The team also sold LAX for Donnie Tournament t-shirts and all the proceeds went toward the scholarship.

The tournament is expected to be an annual event and each year, the team will raise money for the scholarship. Zybrick hopes this will be a tradition that the future Rowan lacrosse teams will continue to follow.

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Tournament Directors Rob Zybrick and Brian Mahoney with Kathy and Donald Farrell

LAX for Donnie News Coverage:

Barstool Sports
BroBible
NBC10 Philadelphia
South Jersey Time
The Whit

►Check out our Storify Story about LAX for Donnie here: https://storify.com/brianmahoneynj/lax-for-donnie