Police officer taken to hospital after opioid exposure, police union president says
By Ashley Zilka
CINCINNATI, OH (WCPO) -- Sgt. Dan Hils thinks it's time to start locking up addicts. Maybe past time.
Another Cincinnati police officer was taken to University of Cincinnati Medical Center after he was exposed to an "unknown substance" Monday. It was at least the third such case in the past two months.
Hils said the officer would recover but was "a little sicker than some of the one's I've seen in the past." The officer was searching a felony suspect for weapons when he touched a powdery substance, Hils said.
"One would assume that we're here dealing with an opiate, which is all over on our streets, and ... is cut with God know's what. You know? Are we dealing with fentanyl, carfentanil, rat poison? We don't know what this stuff gets cut with, but it's all over on our streets," said Hils, president of Cincinnati's police union.
Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin, has been linked to overdose deaths in the Tri-State, as dealers mix the drug with cocaine, heroin and other narcotics. Carfentanil, another synthetic drug, is 10,000 times more powerful than morphine and is used as an elephant tranquilizer.
Hils said the officer would recover but was "a little sicker than some of the one's I've seen in the past." The officer was searching a felony suspect for weapons when he touched a powdery substance, Hils said.
"One would assume that we're here dealing with an opiate, which is all over on our streets, and ... is cut with God know's what. You know? Are we dealing with fentanyl, carfentanil, rat poison? We don't know what this stuff gets cut with, but it's all over on our streets," said Hils, president of Cincinnati's police union.
Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin, has been linked to overdose deaths in the Tri-State, as dealers mix the drug with cocaine, heroin and other narcotics. Carfentanil, another synthetic drug, is 10,000 times more powerful than morphine and is used as an elephant tranquilizer.
Hils said the officer would recover but was "a little sicker than some of the one's I've seen in the past." The officer was searching a felony suspect for weapons when he touched a powdery substance, Hils said.
"One would assume that we're here dealing with an opiate, which is all over on our streets, and ... is cut with God know's what. You know? Are we dealing with fentanyl, carfentanil, rat poison? We don't know what this stuff gets cut with, but it's all over on our streets," said Hils, president of Cincinnati's police union.
Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin, has been linked to overdose deaths in the Tri-State, as dealers mix the drug with cocaine, heroin and other narcotics. Carfentanil, another synthetic drug, is 10,000 times more powerful than morphine and is used as an elephant tranquilizer.
"We have some programs that are out there, we have some ideas, but in the end it needs to be backed by the ability to be able to take them, even if it's to treatment, in a way that is not their choice anymore," Hils said. "And that's where we're missing the game."
Newtown Police Chief Tom Synan, who leads the Hamilton County Heroin Coalition Task Force, told WCPO earlier this year that he warns officers about the risk and the possibility they could be exposed to a deadly drug. Each officer carries a Narcan kit -- and it’s not only to revive people they respond to, but just in case they become exposed.
On the same day in early August, two officers received medical treatment after separate incidents involving drugs just an hour apart. In May, an officer went to UC Medical Center when contact with an "unknown illicit substance" during a traffic stop left him feeling sick and light-headed.
In East Liverpool, Ohio, an officer overdosed by simply touching some fentanyl that rubbed off on his clothes during an arrest, authorities said. It took four doses of Narcan to revive him.
Hils worried an officer might someday encounter an even deadlier mix. Slower, more methodical searches might help, but Hils said that comes with risks: namely, that a suspect could quickly turn and attack an officer.
"We are caught in a catch-22, between a rock and a hard place -- our people are being put in extreme danger because of this crisis," Hils said.
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