Author: The Fix

  • "Motherhood & Meth" Doc Explores How The Drug Affects Families

    "Motherhood & Meth" Doc Explores How The Drug Affects Families

    The documentary spotlights Fresno, California, where the high incidence of child abuse is directly attributed to methamphetamine.

    With so much focus on the opioid crisis, many don’t realize that meth is reportedly making a big comeback, and now a new documentary, Motherhood & Meth, is taking a look at the devastating consequences of being a parent suffering from addiction.

    Motherhood & Meth is a short documentary directed by journalist Mary Newman, and it specifically focuses on the connection between meth addiction and child abuse.

    The documentary spotlights Fresno, California, where a large degree of child abuse is directly attributed to the drug.

    The Valley Children’s Hospital, which is in the Fresno area, sees about 1,000 cases of abuse every year, and the hospital’s medical director, Dr. Philip Hyden, believes meth is involved in 70% of them.  

    Child abuse and neglect cases in Fresno County have gone up 31% in the last 15 years, and often the abuse can start early, with a reported 19,000 pregnant women in America suffering from meth addiction. (In the Fresno area, meth is the number one drug abused by pregnant women when they check into rehab.)

    Newman told The Atlantic that when she talked to mothers with addiction for her documentary, “I would ask if meth ever caused them or someone in their life to become violent. Everyone responded with an emphatic ‘yes.’”

    And a number of the people Newman spoke to were repeating cycles of violence they suffered when they were young, often from parents that were also hooked on meth themselves.

    “The power methamphetamine has on a person’s life was the most surprising part of [reporting] this story,” Newman says. “I would speak with people struggling with addiction and they would have a certain self-awareness that their decisions were derailing their life, but they would also describe a feeling of complete helplessness.”

    This documentary reports that meth busts in California have increased over five times between 2000 and 2016, and a DEA official told the Atlantic that meth is cheaper than ever to buy, with the prices dropping from about $968 an ounce in 2013, to $250 in 2016.

    Leticia Bayton, a Fresno cop who was interviewed for the documentary, confessed that her sister, who is also a mother, succumbed to meth addiction.

    “It destroyed her,” she said. “It completely killed her from the inside out. She used to be an excellent mother, totally attentive, devoted to her child. Then once the meth came in, she stopped caring about herself and her children. Her sense of responsibility faded, and her entire life revolved around where she was going to get her next hit.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Iceland May Be On The Verge Of Opioid Epidemic Similar To The US

    Iceland May Be On The Verge Of Opioid Epidemic Similar To The US

    In 2017, there was about one drug-related death per 10,000 people in Iceland, compared to one per 4,500 in the US. 

    During the first half of this year, Iceland has already seen 29 likely drug overdose deaths—nearly as many as the 32 total that the country had in 2017. 

    The alarming increase, according to Reykjavík Grapevine magazine, could be due to a developing crisis in the country. 

    Ólafur B. Einarsson of the Directorate Of Health—a government agency under Iceland’s Ministry of Welfare—tells the Grapevine that substances like amphetamine and cocaine have been discovered in various samples from those who have died, though those substances have not been determined to be the cause of death. 

    “There have been 29 deaths that are probably related to drugs from January to the middle of June this year,” Einarsson said. “But it remains to be confirmed whether they are all directly linked to drugs.” 

    Einarsson added that cocaine has been discovered in five of the deaths, which is “a lot.” However, he says, a bigger concern is the abuse of prescription drugs in the country. 

    “Compared to other Nordic countries, Iceland has a 30% higher consumption rate of nervous system medication like oxycodone,” Einarsson says. 

    Because of this statistic, the Grapevine notes, the Directorate Of Health in Iceland began an online prescription database in 2016 with the hope that it would prevent physicians from prescribing numerous medications to the same patient. 

    According to Einarsson, another alarming trend lies in the ages of those abusing drugs. “This year, we discovered that more young people consumed a mix of strong opioid analgesics and cannabis or alcohol,” Einarsson told the Grapevine

    According to Einarsson, the group most at risk is young men. In fact, 79% of those dead in 2018 were males. 

    While the specific numbers don’t touch the United States in terms of quantity, the per capita ratio does. Iceland is home to only 338,000 people, while the U.S. has a population of more than 326,000,000.

    According to the Grapevine, there was about one drug-related death per 10,000 people in Iceland last year, compared to one per 4,500 in the U.S. 

    “In my opinion, the current situation is a crisis and if the numbers will continue to rise this year, we will in fact be very close to the figures of the United States, proportionally speaking,” Einarsson said. 

    The drug-related deaths reflect a larger problem in Iceland.  

    “Overall, there’s a lot more going on than drug-related deaths,” Einarsson told the Grapevine. “This is the darkest part of the whole picture and there are hundreds of people who are admitted to the hospitals every year due to drug overuse. There have been questions about the healthcare system and how to improve it for several years now.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Mel B To Enter Rehab For Alcohol, Sex Addiction

    Mel B To Enter Rehab For Alcohol, Sex Addiction

    Brown says she has been using alcohol to “numb my pain,” spurred by a difficult divorce and the death of her father.

    TV personality and performer Mel B is heading to rehab for alcohol and sex addiction, according to the Guardian.

    The former Spice Girl, who has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), said she’s had an “incredibly difficult” six months in which she’s had to relive past traumas while writing her upcoming memoir Brutally Honest

    “It has been unbelievably traumatic reliving an emotionally abusive relationship and confronting so many massive issues in my life,” she said.

    The America’s Got Talent judge (born Melanie Brown) confessed that she has been using alcohol to “numb my pain,” spurred by a difficult divorce and the death of her father.

    “Sometimes it is too hard to cope with all the emotions I feel. But the problem has never been about sex or alcohol—it is underneath all that,” she said, according to BBC. “No one knows myself better than I do. But I am dealing with it.”

    She further clarified her decision to enter rehab on a recent Ellen appearance. “No, I’m not an alcoholic; no, I’m not a sex addict,” she told guest host Lea Michele.

    This isn’t the first time Mel B has sought professional help. She told Michele that she has been receiving therapy since her father got diagnosed with cancer nearly a decade ago.

    The current treatment she has been receiving has been “really helping me,” she said, according to The Sun. “I am fully aware I am at a crisis point.”

    The singer and songwriter is getting help to become “a better version of myself for my kids, for my family and for all the people who have supported me in my life,” she said.

    And if she can be a voice for those who silently suffer, “if I can shine a light on the issue of pain, PTSD and the things men and women do to mask it, I will,” she added.

    Mel B is finalizing her divorce with Stephen Belafonte, which ended with restraining orders and a domestic violence trial that was settled out of court.

    The singer said she was emotionally and “financially battered” by the breakup.

    “You know, I was with the same person for 10 years, and that was quite a turmoil, very intense,” she said on Ellen. “That’s all I can say about it. I’d like to say a lot more, but on this show, let’s keep it PC. But… I did kind of have to ease my pain. I suffer a lot from PTSD.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Noah Cyrus Talks Anxiety, Depression

    Noah Cyrus Talks Anxiety, Depression

    On her new EP, Miley Cyrus’s younger sister opens up about depression and “how it’s okay to feel those feelings.”

    Noah Cyrus is the other famous daughter of country star Billy Ray Cyrus and she also has showbiz in her blood. She made her acting debut on the show Doc at the age of three, and sang the theme song for the animated movie Ponyo at the age of eight.

    Now Noah is one of a number of young pop stars who is getting candid about her depression and anxiety struggles.

    Noah says that her experiences with anxiety and depression shaped her upcoming EP. She told L’Officiel her latest release is “mostly just about how my emotions have been, and about my anxiety, and how I’ve been struggling with depression, and how it’s okay to feel those feelings.”

    Noah has dealt with the struggle of becoming a celebrity in the day and age of social media, adding, “A lot of people like to judge you, and make fun of you on the internet, and people make you feel crazy whenever you’re in a depression or having anxiety or having a panic attack.”

    Noah’s new music also deals with “being sad and having your emotions and not being able to ignore the feelings you’re having.”

    Her new music has been an outlet for her emotions, and with her latest single, “Make Me (Cry),” a duet with Labrinth, she’s showing the world more of her self-proclaimed “emo side.”

    Noah says that releasing a single where she’s more in touch with her feelings may have been influenced by her brother, Trace Cyrus, the lead singer of Metro Station. “I think [it] probably stems from growing up with Trace in my house because he was the king of emo.”

    In addition to being more in touch with her mental health in her music, Cyrus has also been dating rapper Lil Xan, who has been outspoken against drug abuse in the hip-hop community. They’ve already recorded a song together, “Live or Die,” and Cyrus told People, “He’s a little teddy bear.”

    In the past, Noah’s sister Miley has also been open about her own struggles with anxiety, depression and substance abuse. She announced to the world that she quit marijuana last year, and she told ABC in 2014, “I went through a time where I was really depressed. I locked myself in my room and my dad had to break my door down. It was a lot to do with, like, I had really bad skin, and I felt really bullied because of that.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dopesick: An Interview with Beth Macy

    Dopesick: An Interview with Beth Macy

    It takes the average user eight years and five to six treatment attempts just to achieve one year of sobriety. And in an era of fentanyl and other even stronger synthetic opioids, many users don’t have eight years.

    As recently as a few years ago, the opioid crisis could be referred to as a “silent epidemic,” perhaps in part due to its degrading nature. Opioid addiction is frequently described using metaphors of slavery, or enslavement, and those within its clutches are liable to feel acutely ashamed. No longer, however, is it possible to argue that the scourge of opioid addiction is being overlooked.

    No doubt that is partly due to the growing enormity of the problem. For each of the past several years, more people have died from drug overdoses than American service members were killed during the entire Vietnam War.

    Meanwhile, energetic and compassionate journalists have been doing outstanding work, covering the crisis from various vantages. Chief among them is Beth Macy, a New York Times-bestselling author, who first began noticing the effects of opioid addiction as a reporter for the Roanoke Times, where she worked for 25 years until 2014. Now she is out with Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America. Gracefully written and deeply reported, Dopesick should act as a vade mecum — a handbook, a guide, an essential introduction — for anyone who may be seeking insight into the deadliest and most vexing drug epidemic in American history. 

    Beth spoke to The Fix over email:

    The Fix: The first chapters of your book, on the origins of the opioid crisis, cover some material that others have explored (most notably Barry Meier, in Pain Killer: An Empire of Deceit and the Origin of America’s Opioid Epidemic). Still, I don’t have the sense that many people are aware of the role that Purdue Pharma played in setting off current epidemic. Briefly, what is their culpability? And why do think their crimes aren’t crimes better known? 

    Beth Macy: I think Meier’s book, Pain Killer, was too early, initially published in 2003, and it was largely set in central Appalachia — a politically unimportant place. Also, let’s not overlook the role that Purdue took in stifling Meier. As I write in the book, company officials had him removed from the beat after his book came out, arguing that he now had a financial stake in making Purdue look bad.

    After the 2007 plea agreement, in which the company’s holding company, Purdue Frederick, pled guilty to criminal misbranding charges and its top three executives to misdemeanor versions of that crime, Purdue and other opioid makers and distributors spent 900 million dollars on political lobbying and campaigns. Purdue continued selling the original OxyContin formula until it was reformulated to be abuse-resistant in 2010, continued for years after that pushing the motion that untreated pain was really the epidemic that Americans should be concerned about. Their culpability in seeding this epidemic is huge.

    You weren’t able to talk directly with any of the Purdue executives who made fortunes from OxyContin, and who criminally misled the public about its addictive potential. But you spent an afternoon interviewing Ronnie Jones, who is currently serving a lengthy prison sentence for running a major heroin distribution operation in West Virginia. How were Jones’s crimes (and his rationalizations for his behavior) different from those of the Purdue executives you wrote about?

    Great question. Jones refused to see that he brought bulk heroin to a rural community in ways that overwhelmed families and first responders in the region with heroin addiction; he told me he believed he was providing a service — his heroin did not have fentanyl in it, he argued, and it was cheaper than when people ran up the heroin highway to get it in Baltimore (and safer because they could stay out of high-crime places).

    At the 2007 sentencing hearing, Purdue executives and their lawyers repeatedly claimed they had no knowledge of crimes that were happening several rungs down the ladder from them; that the government had not proved their culpability in the specific crimes. According to new Justice Department documents unearthed and recently published by The New York Times , that was simply not true. For two decades, Purdue leaders blamed the users for misusing their drug; they refused to accept responsibility for criminal misbranding that resulted in widespread addiction and waves of drug-fueled crime that will be felt in communities and families for generations to come.

    You quote a health care professional who said that previous drug epidemics began waning after enough people finally got the message: “Don’t mess with this shit, not even a little bit.” That provoked a thought: Shouldn’t we be long past this point with opioids? On the one hand, I’m enormously sympathetic to anyone who is struggling with addiction. But it’s frustrating to realize that the opioid crisis is still building. Why aren’t more people as risk-averse about heroin as they obviously should be?

    The crisis is still building because the government’s response to it has largely been impotent. And it’s been festering for two decades. Opioid addiction doesn’t just go away. It takes the average user eight years and five to six treatment attempts just to achieve one year of sobriety. And in an era of fentanyl and other even stronger synthetic opioids, many users don’t have eight years. I hope we will soon get to the point of public education where no young person “messes with this shit, not even once,” but right now we still have 2.6 million people with opioid use disorder. Even though physicians have begun prescribing less, we still have all these addicted people who should be seen as patients worthy of medical care, not simply criminals. Too often that doesn’t happen until we’re sitting in their funeral pews.

    One of the women you write about, Tess Henry, slid down a long road. You got to know her and her family quite well, over a number of years. And some of the other stories in this book are just as heartbreaking.

    It was a lot of pain to absorb and process, yes. And yet my heartache was nothing at all compared to what these families are going through.

    In a couple instances, Tess reached out to you directly, asking you for help. How did you calculate how to respond?

    I took it case by case; I just went with my gut, and I got input from my husband and trusted friends along the way. I decided it was okay to drive Tess around to [Narcotics Anonymous] meetings, recording our interviews as I drove, with her permission. But it wasn’t okay when she texted me late one night to come get her from a drug house. (I referred her plea to her mother and recovery coach instead.)

    I occasionally gave her mother unsolicited advice because I cared about her and I cared about Tess, and I felt I had access to objective information about medication-assisted treatment that Patricia didn’t have. When Tess was murdered on Christmas Eve, I put my notes away and for several days just focused on being a friend to her mom. But I did accompany the family to the funeral home when they made arrangements (taking occasional notes), and I was there in the room of the funeral parlor with her mom and her grandfather when they said goodbye to her. It took funeral technicians two days to prepare her body for that. It was the most heartbreaking scene I’ve ever witnessed. There was no need to take notes in that moment. I will never forget it as long as I live. I said a tearful goodbye to our poet, too.

    Was there ever a risk, over the course of your reporting, of becoming too involved in the lives and predicaments of the people you were writing about? 

    Always there’s a risk, but I’ve been doing this for more than 30 years now, and I know that my greatest skill — which is that I get close to people — can also be my Achilles. When I trust my gut and try to do the right thing — always also getting advice from editor and reporter friends along the way, including my husband, who is just so smart and so spot-on always — it usually works out.

    I’m grateful to have read Dopesick. But at various times it left me infuriated, appalled, and depressed. Can you leave us with anything to be hopeful about? 

    There are some pretty heartening grassroots efforts that I spotlight at the book’s end, mostly involving providing access to treatment and harm-reduction services. And Virginia just became the 33rd state to approve Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, which will help 300,000 to 400,000 people in the commonwealth have access to substance use disorder services. Seventeen more states to go! There is so much more work to be done, especially in Appalachia, where overdose deaths are highest and resistance to harm reduction programs (easy-access MAT and syringe exchange and recovery) can be severe. My goal is that Dopesick not only educates people but also mobilizes them to care and create what Tess Henry called “urgent care for the addicted” services in their own hometowns.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Smoking Pot Can Disqualify You From Cannabis Jobs

    Smoking Pot Can Disqualify You From Cannabis Jobs

    “Sometimes you can get by with a low-level, misdemeanor possession charge, but not always,” said one medical marijuana job recruiter.

    Medical marijuana is creating about 25,000 new jobs in Florida, but smoking cannabis disqualifies many people from working in the industry, according to a report by The Orlando Sentinel

    “We get hundreds of applications for every job opening we have, and maybe only 10% of those are qualified and meet the legal requirements,” said Michelle Terrell, spokesman for Curaleaf, a Massachusetts-based company that opened a dispensary in south Orlando in August. 

    In Florida, state law requires that marijuana workers have a clean criminal background check with no felonies. Drug-related offenses, including smoking marijuana, can derail applicants, said James Yagielo, founder of HempStaff, a Miami-based medical marijuana recruiting firm.

    “Sometimes you can get by with a low-level, misdemeanor possession charge, but not always,” Yagielo said.

    Because of this, he advises people not to mention their illicit drug use in an interview, even if they feel that their experience with marijuana helps explain their qualifications. 

    “For a lot of people at the entry level, they say they want to get into this industry because of a passion for cannabis,” he said. “We usually tell them they should avoid bringing up any illegal activity regarding cannabis in an interview.”

    Because of the more intense screening process, the marijuana industry pays slightly more than other service industry jobs in Florida, with entry-level wages between $11 and $15 an hour. This makes the industry appealing to many people who aren’t intimidated by the requirements. The industry already created nearly 3,000 jobs during 2017 and is expected to grow to 25,000 jobs by 2022.

    “We need customer-experience specialists, we need drivers and we’ll be expanding our phone operations,” said Scott Klenet, a spokesperson for Knox Medical, a cannabis dispensary that is “aggressively hiring.” 

    “And what we find is that people come from all walks of life,” Klenet added. 

    Catie Callahan, 34, gave up a management job at a national grocery chain to open the new Orlando Curaleaf dispensary. She said that she sees cannabis as a business opportunity that she did not want to pass up.

    “I took a class on medical marijuana regulations last year, and I’ve been keeping my eyes open for an opportunity,” she said. 

    She considered the way that working in medical marijuana would impact her career and ultimately decided that the benefits outweighed the risks. 

    “There is a stigma, but I’m not worried about leaving this business and not being able to get a job because I worked in medical marijuana.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Tunnel Beneath KFC Connects Drug Smugglers in Arizona, Mexico

    Tunnel Beneath KFC Connects Drug Smugglers in Arizona, Mexico

    The county sheriff’s department called the discovery a “heavy blow to that transnational criminal organization that built this tunnel.”

    A routine stop for an equipment violation led law enforcement in Arizona to an operation that numerous media outlets compared to the AMC series Breaking Bad, with a near-600-foot tunnel that connected a former fast food restaurant to a private home in Mexico for the purposes of trafficking narcotics.

    Police pulled over Jesus Ivan Lopez Garcia on August 13 after he was observed removing several containers from an abandoned Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) franchise located one mile from the U.S.-Mexico border; a search of the vehicle turned up more than 200 packages of various narcotics, including 6.8 pounds of fentanyl.

    This led to a search of the restaurant, where a tunnel traversed the border to a home in San Luis Rio Colorado, Mexico. The county sheriff’s department described the discovery as a “heavy blow to that transnational criminal organization that built this tunnel.”

    According to CNN, court documents showed that Lopez Garcia had purchased the former KFC location in San Luis, Arizona in April 2018. The structure was described as “vacant in recent years,” which raised the suspicion of police when Lopez Garcia was seen taking the containers, including a tool box from the former restaurant and loading them into a trailer attached to a pickup truck.

    Officers then pulled him over for what was described as an unspecified equipment violation, and during the traffic stop, a K-9 officer alerted authorities to suspected drugs in the two containers.

    A search of the containers yielded more than 261 pounds of methamphetamine, 14 pounds of cocaine, 30 pounds of white heroin, 13.7 pounds of brown heroin and 6.8 pounds of fentanyl.

    Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Special Agent in Charge Scott Brown told a CNN affiliate station in Arizona that the fentanyl “translates to over three million dosage units.” Authorities gave the total price of the drugs at more than $1 million.

    After obtaining a warrant, HSI conducted a search of the KFC location on August 14 and found an eight-inch hole with a depth of 22 feet.

    This led to a walkway that was five feet tall and three feet wide that ran 590 feet across the border to San Luis Rio Colorado in Mexico. Mexican authorities reported that a search of a residential property on August 15 found an entrance to the tunnel under a bed. 

    “There was no mechanism to physically come up to the small opening” in the KFC location, said Brown in a press conference. “The narcotics we believe were raised up by a rope [and] then loaded into the tool box and taken out of the abandoned restaurant.”

    Yuma Sector Chief Patrol Agent Anthony Porvaznik said that the tunnel will be filled with cement to keep others from using it.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • No Amount Of Alcohol Is Safe To Drink, Game-Changing Study Reveals

    No Amount Of Alcohol Is Safe To Drink, Game-Changing Study Reveals

    Alcohol accounted for 20% of deaths in 2016, according to a new report.

    Even one drink occasionally may be one too many, researchers are now saying.

    This information came from the Global Burden of Diseases study, which is carried out at the University of Washington in Seattle, and was recently published in the Lancet medical journal

    According to the Guardian, the Global Burden of Diseases study is the “largest and most detailed research carried out on the effects of alcohol.”

    The researchers found that in 2016, alcohol led to 2.8 million deaths and was the leading risk factor when it came to premature mortality and disability in those ages 15 to 49, in which it accounted for 20% of deaths. 

    According to the study, current habits when it comes to alcohol “pose dire ramifications for future population health in the absence of policy action today. Alcohol use contributes to health loss from many causes and exacts its toll across the lifespan, particularly among men.”

    Researchers at the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation studied the alcohol intake from people in 195 countries using data from 694 different sources ranging from 1990 to 2016 to determine “how common drinking was.” 

    They then examined 592 worldwide studies involving 28 million people to determine the potential health risks associated with alcohol. 

    Specifically, the study found that alcohol consumption was a cause of cancer in those over age 50, especially women. According to previous research, one in 13 breast cancer diagnoses in the UK were related to alcohol.

    The study determined that across the world, 27.1% of cancer deaths in females and 18.9% in men over age 50 were connected to alcohol consumption. 

    Among those in younger age groups, causes of death linked to alcohol were tuberculosis (1.4% of deaths), road injuries (1.2%) and self-harm (1.1%).

    Additionally, about 2.4 billion people around the world drink alcohol. One-quarter of women drink, while 39% of men do.

    Senior author Emmanuela Gakidou of the University of Washington says that the results indicate that new policies on alcohol may be necessary in the future.

    “Our results indicate that alcohol use and its harmful effects on health could become a growing challenge as countries become more developed, and enacting or maintaining strong alcohol control policies will be vital,” she told the Guardian.

    Dr. Robyn Burton, of King’s College London, stated in a commentary in the Lancet that the study results were clear.

    “Alcohol is a colossal global health issue and small reductions in health-related harms at low levels of alcohol intake are outweighed by the increased risk of other health-related harms, including cancer,” she wrote. 

    Burton stated that when it comes to public policy, methods to reduce alcohol intake could include price increases, taxation and setting prices depending on the strength of the drink. She also stated that limiting alcohol marketing could help.

    Dr. Max Griswold, lead author of the study, said, “Previous studies have found a protective effect of alcohol on some conditions, but we found that the combined health risks associated with alcohol increases with any amount of alcohol.

    “The strong association between alcohol consumption and the risk of cancer, injuries, and infectious diseases offset the protective effects for heart disease in our study. Although the health risks associated with alcohol start off being small with one drink a day, they then rise rapidly as people drink more.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Mom Accused Of Letting Teen Daughter Run Pot Shop From Bedroom

    Mom Accused Of Letting Teen Daughter Run Pot Shop From Bedroom

    Police reportedly uncovered 80 pounds of cannabis in the closet of the master bedroom.

    A 15-year-old girl is in state custody after sheriff’s deputies alleged that she made cannabis deals out of her bedroom, supported by her mother.

    On August 17, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office served a search warrant at the family’s Delhi, California home. The search uncovered 80 pounds of cannabis in the master bedroom closet and 12 “large marijuana plants” in the backyard growing in a “makeshift greenhouse,” according to sheriff’s deputies. A loaded AK-47 was also found.

    According to a statement posted on Facebook, during the investigation officers allegedly learned that “the 15-year-old daughter was given marijuana from her mother to use and sell from her bedroom.”

    In addition, officers found “packaged marijuana, edibles and other items associated with the sales and use of marijuana” that they say belonged to the 15-year-old girl.

    The girl and another minor have since been removed from the home by Child Protective Services. Two adults in the home have been arrested—Jose Reyes Martinez, 44, on suspicion of marijuana crimes, possessing an assault weapon and assault on a child; and Norma Angelica Alvarez, 44, on suspicion of marijuana crimes and child endangerment.

    Parents all across the United States have lost custody of their children for providing them marijuana, but unlike this particular case—as far as we know—it is often to treat debilitating disorders like epilepsy.

    One recent example happened in Macon, Georgia, where Suzeanna and Matthew Brill are fighting for custody of their son David, who suffers from seizures. The couple had illegally purchased cannabis to try and ease David’s seizures, after prescription medication had failed to make a difference.

    The family was on the waiting list for Georgia’s Low THC Oil Program, but couldn’t wait any longer.

    The parents say the cannabis was “a miracle” for David. “I was tired of seeing my kid half-dead all the time,” said Suzeanna. “[Marijuana] helped my son where all other options had failed.”

    Cannabis is illegal in the state of Georgia. Only possession of up to 20 fluid ounces of low THC oil by qualified residents is allowed. Seizure disorder, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease are among the qualifying conditions for Georgia’s limited medical cannabis program.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Demi Lovato’s Alleged Dealer Claims She Knew Pills Were Risky

    Demi Lovato’s Alleged Dealer Claims She Knew Pills Were Risky

    Friends of Lovato’s said they became concerned when they learned that the singer had begun spending time with Brandon Johnson in April.

    The man who allegedly provided singer Demi Lovato with the pills that she overdosed on in July said that he warned the singer that the pills were “aftermarket” and that she knew the risks with taking them. 

    Brandon Johnson told TMZ that Lovato texted him at 4 a.m. on the day that she overdosed, asking him to come over. Johnson said that he brought pills over and warned Lovato that they were not pharmaceuticals, so they were likely to be stronger.

    TMZ has previously reported that Lovato’s overdose was likely caused by OxyContin pills laced with fentanyl and that Johnson got the pills from Mexico. 

    Johnson insinuated to TMZ that they had done drugs together in the past and that they had a sexual relationship.

    After freebasing the pills together, Johnson told TMZ that he and Lovato watched true crime TV. When he left around 7 or 8 a.m. Lovato was asleep but not in distress, he said. 

    However, when Lovato’s assistant arrived around 11:30 a.m. the singer was in respiratory distress. Paramedics responded and administered Narcan to the pop star who went on to spend two weeks in the hospital before going to rehab. 

    Johnson said that Lovato’s overdose had made him realize how dangerous the pills can be. He added that the incident was “a wake up call for [Lovato].”

    Friends of Lovato’s have told TMZ that Johnson is “bad news” and that they were worried when they learned that the singer had begun hanging around with him in April.

    Just a month before the two connected, Johnson was reportedly arrested with $10,000, a loaded semi-automatic handgun and drugs. However, it seems to have been common knowledge with the singer’s circle that Johnson was dealing Lovato pills. 

    After her overdose, Lovato took to Instagram to discuss her overdose. 

    “I have always been transparent about my journey with addiction,” she wrote. “What I’ve learned is that this illness is not something that disappears or fades with time. It is something I must continue to overcome and have not done yet.”  

    She thanked the hospital that cared for her, and her friends and family

    “I now need time to heal and focus on my sobriety and road to recovery. The love you have all shown me will never be forgotten and I look forward to the day where I can say I came out on the other side. I will keep fighting.”

    View the original article at thefix.com