This Ain’t Your ‘GOP Sex Orgy” Cocaine

Since May 13, 2022, the Erie County Medical Examiner’s Office has recorded an alarming and tragic number of Erie County resident deaths with suspected cocaine and fentanyl involvement. Representatives from Erie County government and community partners joined forces on Thursday, May 26 with a wholehearted appeal to the community: stay alive, don’t trust your cocaine.

As of May 26, 2022, there were 42 confirmed opioid-related overdose deaths in Erie County in 2022. Toxicology reports to confirm the presence of opioids and other substances can take several weeks; however, based on scene investigations, since May 13 at least 12 deaths had suspected cocaine and fentanyl involvement.

“This is a problem for our county, and as we have in the past, we are confronting it directly,” said Erie County Executive Mark C. Poloncarz. “Our team made great progress in decreasing the number of overall opioid overdose deaths from peak of 301 deaths in 2016 to 156 deaths in 2019. However, with increases in 2020 and 2021, we have to redouble our efforts. I want to thank our task force partners and elected officials who have joined us today, and who are with us in this battle we are waging against overdose deaths.”

Opioid-related overdoses caused 286 deaths in Erie County in 2021. Of those, 40% were associated with fentanyl and cocaine, part of a trend in Erie County past few years.

“Opioid overdoses happen everywhere in Erie County – this epidemic has affected each city, town or village,” said Erie County Commissioner of Health Dr. Gale Burstein. “Substance use disorder is a chronic disease of the brain and our county’s strategy is to treat this as a public health issue, which it absolutely is. That means building on our secondary prevention tools – Narcan training and access, syringe access, fentanyl test strips, connections to medically assisted treatment (MAT) – and sharing these harm reduction resources aggressively.”

In the past week since an initial release on this topic, ECDOH has received 163 text requests for Narcan through its Text for Narcan program at (716) 225-5473. “Our messages about harm reduction have already resonated among local law enforcement, first responders and health care agencies,” said Opiate Epidemic Task Force Director Cheryll Moore.

Moore continued, “Having first responders trained and willing to carry Narcan, and linking people to immediate care at hospital emergency departments, are two examples of systems changes that have made a positive difference. This progress shows that our community has the ability to make major shifts in how we approach substance use disorder and the stigma around it.”

“As District Attorney, I am focused on prosecuting the dealers who peddle these deadly drugs while providing help to those who are struggling with substance use disorder,” said Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn. “We established the nation’s first Opioid Intervention Court to save lives by putting low-level criminal cases on hold to immediately connect people to treatment and other services. I warn the residents of Erie County that fentanyl-laced cocaine and other substances continue to be found in our communities. I strongly encourage anyone who is suffering from substance use disorder to seek help. I want to thank Erie County and the Department of Health for everything that they do to educate our residents about substance use disorder and overdose prevention.”

New Program

ECDOH started a program for bars, restaurants and other public establishments to order free harm reduction materials for their business. Take-out bags, coasters, removable window decals, emergency Narcan wall boxes and Narcan supplies can be ordered at no cost, with the hope and expectation that the business will use and display them in public areas and employee workspaces. Additional materials will be available this summer. Visit bit.ly/ECDOHNarcan for order form or call (716) 858-7695. Online ordering available soon.

Resources and Actions

Opioid use disorder and cocaine/fentanyl overdoses are complex issues, but the public health message is simple: we want to keep you alive. There are ways to reduce your risk of overdose and death if you choose to use opioids, cocaine or other risky substances.

Carry Narcan, and know how and when to use it.
Never use alone. Have Narcan and a friend with you who is not using drugs, or contact a service like Never Use Alone (neverusealone.com)
Test your drugs for fentanyl even if you think it is cocaine or another substance that is not an opioid. Free test strips available from the Erie County Department of Health. Call (716) 858-7695.

Seek support. The Buffalo & Erie County Addictions Hotline is available 24/7 with referrals for individuals and their families. Call (716) 831-7007.
Seek treatment. Local hospital emergency departments can connect patients to immediate medication assisted treatment. Ask for NY Matters.

Bars, restaurants and other public establishments can order free materials from ECDOH, as available. Visit bit.ly/ECDOHNarcan for order form or call (716) 858-7695.

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‘Frazzled’ Trump looks to be  ‘fraying a bit at the edges’ after days in court: expert



Reacting to an angry rant delivered by Donald Trump when he showed up for court on Friday morning, CNN Senior Legal Analyst Elie Honig noted the former president looked "frazzled," which could be a clue to prosecutors that they are getting to him after only three days in court.

Speaking with host Kate Bolduan after the former president had already been admitted into the courtroom, where he will tried on 34 felony counts in the Stormy Daniels hush money trial, Honig noted that Trump seemed agitated as he addressed the press and listed off a series of grievances.

"Elie, from just watching how Donald Trump was in speaking to reporters before he went in, he was — he was definitely at least projecting that he was angry and frustrated, if he wasn't actually angry and frustrated," CNN's Bolduan prompted her colleague. "If you're a prosecutor and you're watching him act the way he did this morning, what do you think? Do you already think you are winning?"

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"So he definitely looked frazzled," the legal analyst replied and then added, "I think that's a good word we can use for this."

"If he's frazzled now, just wait until week three because I think what Donald Trump is learning is that it is enormously stressful to be on trial," he continued. "I've never even had, of course, the experience of being the defendant, I've just done it as a lawyer."

"It's incredibly stressful," he elaborated. "It's long days, it's excruciating. It can be boring. We saw him nodding off during jury selection and it will get to him.

"And I think, if I'm the prosecutor — I'm not so into the head games in the psychology of it all — but I do think I would see someone who's perhaps fraying a bit at the edges and, who knows, that may lead to poor strategic decisions by Donald Trump or other behavior that could be self-destructive."

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