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Tag: heroin use by state

Posted on December 11, 2017

McKenzie Woller

McKenzie Woller
McKenzie Woller

Angels Info

Name:  McKenzie Woller
Age:  19
Location: Augusta, Georgia
DOD: November 13th, 2015

Angels Obituary:

McKenzie suffered from anxiety and Borderline Personality Disorder. She started cutting in middle school and then got involved with an abusive boyfriend who hurt her physically and emotionally, and introduced her to opiates. She started with dialysis pills an fentanyl lollipops and patches. She switched to heroin. She fought so hard to get clean, and we fought with her. She had just gotten out of detox and moved to CO (with her grandparents)from GA to remove herself from temptation 7 weeks before she overdosed. My mom found her in the bathtub.

Originally Posted HERE
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Posted on December 10, 2017December 10, 2017

Chloe Shellady

Chloe Shellady
Chloe Shellady

Angels Info

Name:  Chloe Shellady
Age:  17
Location: Chicago, Illinois
DOD: October 24th, 2014

Angels Obituary:

Chloë’s struggle probably began in the 8th grade and continued until her passing her senior year of high school. In the beginning she was just smoking marijuana, and when they say that it is a gateway drug…it most certainly was in her case. Chloë was in and out of various rehabs, hospitals and wilderness programs. Her family did everything to help her fight her overwhelming personal struggle against drugs. There was part of her that really wanted sobriety. But at the same time, she believed she could handle the drugs. Yet she was no match for the horrendous power of heroin. From the time she started smoking heroin (she didn’t inject) until her death, was a mere 15 months.

Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Dylan Garruto

Dylan Garruto
Dylan Garruto

Angels Info

Name:  Dylan Garruto
Age:  24
Location: Westlake Village, California
DOD: April 10th, 2016

Angels Obituary:

Dylan Richard Garruto of Westlake Village passed away on Sunday, April 10, 2016. Born in Westlake Village on September 24, 1991, he is survived by his parents, Anthony and Lynn and his two brothers, Conor and Bryan. He was a loving son and brother and will be deeply missed. 
Dylan was a precious soul, who loved fashion and making a statement. He had a kind heart and loved his friends and family dearly. He was fighting against the call of addiction and although he was doing everything he needed to, he lost this terrible battle. Addiction is a disease of the worst kind .. it grabs you and doesn’t let go. It keeps pursuing you, despite your best efforts to stay strong. He did not choose to become an addict, no one would. He should not be judged. He was our child and we are very proud of his valiant effort to beat this disease. Forever he will be in our hearts. 
A celebration of Dylan’s life will be at St. Maximilian Kolbe Catholic Church, at 5801 Kanan Road, Westlake Village, on Saturday, April 23, 2016 at noon.

Originally Posted HERE

 

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Posted on December 10, 2017

Madison Bailey Marini

Madison Bailey Marini
Madison Bailey Marini

Angels Info

Name:  Madison Bailey Marini
Age:  22
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina
DOD: December 29, 2016

Angels Obituary:

Nobody ever wins against the devil, not without help. 

Those are the words of a North Carolina mother who is speaking out about heroin addiction after her daughter was found dead of an apparent overdose in a Taco Bell restaurant Thursday. 

Twenty-two years ago, Claudia Marini said she chose strong names for her daughter, Madison Bailey Marini. Madison means “gift of God,” or, “strong fighter,” and Bailey is derived from “bailiff.” 

“She had so much compassion deep in her. She loved to read, and sing and she was brilliant,” Marini told WGHP-TV. 

Madison was a straight-A student, a soccer goalie and a singer among other things. Around high school graduation time, however, Claudia says her daughter went down a different path, “and stopped going to school and those things weren’t important anymore.” 

Madison denied it, said she didn’t have a problem and she had it under control, Claudia said. But, it was undeniable. Madison had become an addict. 

“I had to say my name, ‘I’m Claudia Marini and I have a daughter who’s an addict,'” Claudia said, of a group treatment session she attended with Madison. 

At that point, Claudia realized Madison would always be an addict. It was her hope that she would become an addict who no longer used. 

“She wasn’t a criminal. They’re not criminals; they’re sick. It’s an illness; they’re sick,” Claudia said. 

Madison began getting in legal trouble, for things such as shoplifting and possession. That legal trouble led her to court, which led her to brief stints in jail. 

“We’d convince her to go into treatment and she’d be fine, and she was just wonderful, wasn’t she?” Claudia said, looking in the direction of her mother – Madison’s grandmother – Rose. “She was wonderful and it was like the old [Madison].” 

Yet, after treatment, Claudia says the same friends which fed Madison’s addiction would pull her back in. Before they knew she was using again, she would be in court on a new charge. 

“It’s a stupid powder and it’s stronger than me,” Claudia said. “It’s stronger than her own mom.” 

Last month, Claudia said she begged the judge not to give Madison jail time. Instead, she asked for him to give her daughter mandatory rehab. 

“I said, ‘If you don’t do this today, we won’t be back on [Jan. 3], because she’ll be dead,’ and I was right,” Claudia said, referring to Tuesday, which would have been Madison’s next court date. 

Christmas was the last time Claudia saw her daughter in person. 

“Even though she was 22, every time she opened a gift it was like she was five,” Claudia said. 

Before Madison left, Claudia told her, “I love you; be safe.” 

“I wish I’d hugged her a little bit tighter, a little bit tighter and told her how much I really loved her and how proud I am of her despite the addiction,” Claudia said, unable to hold back her tears. 

Days later, on Thursday, Madison posted a video and message to Claudia’s Facebook page. 

“About how much she loved me and that she was sorry,” Claudia said. 

Yet, around 7:40 that night, police were called to the Taco Bell, in King, North Carolina. It was there where they found Madison, in the bathroom, dead after an apparent overdose. 

“I heard my mom scream out, ‘No,'” Claudia said, after the first phone call. “No.” 

Madison had overdosed before. Claudia began to change clothes and prepared to go to the hospital to be with her daughter. 

“The second phone call came, that they had worked on her all they could and that she is gone,” she recalled. 

King police say Madison’s preliminary autopsy revealed no natural cause of death. However, they’re still waiting on the toxicology report. 

“She was alone,” Claudia said. “She had died alone, in the bathroom in a Taco Bell.” 

Tuesday, Claudia sat in a chair in her living room in Asheboro, speaking to WGHP in the hope of raising awareness about addiction. 

“It’s devastating that, as a mom, that what I hang on to every day of my 22-year-old daughter is a piece of her hair,” Claudia said, sobbing, holding a sandwich bag holding Madison’s hair. “Because I can’t hold her, and I can’t touch her and I can’t brush her hair.” 

The day after Madison’s death, King police Chief Paula May told WGHP it’s going to take more than educating the public about drug abuse to fix the problem. May believes it will take an effort by prosecutors, courts and judges. Like Claudia, May believes there need to be alternatives in sentencing, like rehabilitation and better programs in correctional facilities. 

“I just don’t want any other moms to have to sit on their couch and hold a piece of their child’s hair in a baggy, because it’s all they have,” Claudia said. 

May says the drug problem in King is worse than it’s ever been; a similar sentiment to that of law enforcement officers in cities and towns all across the United States. 

“Heroin, heroin is the devil,” Claudia said. “If anybody ever asks me what the devil looks like, that’s what the devil looks like, and that’s why these kids need help, because nobody ever wins against the devil. Not without help.” 

Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

David Councill

David Councill
David Councill

Angels Info

Name:  David Councill
Age:  23
Location: Lexington, Kentucky
DOD: March 19, 2017

Angels Obituary:

Frankfort – David Edward Councill, age 23, passed away Sunday, March 19, 2017 in Lexington. Services will be held at Harrod Brothers Funeral Home on Thursday, March 23, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. with Rev. Gary Graves officiating. The family will receive friends at Harrod Brothers Funeral Home from 11:00 a.m. until the service hour on Thursday. 

David was born in Evansville, Indiana on April 12, 1993 to Alan Corey Councill of Frankfort and Tonya Gail Sexton, who preceded him in death. He was a manager of Domino’s Pizza in Lexington. He loved music, especially playing the trumpet. He was a volunteer for Bugles Across America. He also enjoyed kayaking. 

In addition to his father, he survived by his siblings, Charles Councill, Damon Sudduth, and Skyler Sudduth; his grandparents, Ed and Bess Councill and Donnie and Joan Sexton; his step-mother, Rachel Councill, his aunt and uncle, Nathan and Allison Depenbrock; and by his girlfriend, Trina Newman. 

In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be made to Self Refind Clinic, 251 Democrat Drive, Frankfort, KY 40601. 

Arrangements are under the direction of Harrod Brothers Funeral Home.

Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Meghan Reid

Meghan Reid
Meghan Reid

Angels Info

Name:  Meghan Reid
Age:  23
Location: Shiawassee County, Michigan
DOD: Oct 30, 2016

Angels Obituary:

Molly Reid’s nightmare became a reality early in the early morning hours of Oct. 30. 

Her phone rang, delivering the heartbreaking news that her daughter’s struggle with drugs was over. Heroin had won. 

“Meghan’s dead,” Reid said. “They are bone-chilling words that you never want to hear and the sights that we saw after that are sights that you never want to see, especially (when it’s) one of your children.” 

Meghan Reid was 23 years old when she overdosed on heroin. 

“She was a dancer, she loved music. She loved people. She did gymnastics,” Reid recalled as she held back tears. “She played sports, she was a track runner, a volleyball player. She had passion for life and what she loved to do. She loved her friends.” 

Reid sifted through photographs, which is all she has left to show others the vibrant smile of her formerly vivacious daughter. 

“It’s beyond difficult to sit here and look at these,” Reid said. “I wish I had even a few more minutes with her.” 


JOURNEY TO HEROIN 

Molly and her long-time boyfriend Doug Chapman, who Meghan called her stepfather, believe it was the past that led her to a life of addiction. 

Meghan’s father killed himself when she was just 9 years old. She was also a victim of molestation. 

“I believe that the numbness, taking away the pain of her own pain from… these struggles that she had, losing her dad and being a victim of another crime, things like that probably were things that set the groundwork for where her head was at, as far as her own personal space and why she wanted to help other people,” Molly Reid said. 

“She made poor choices,” added Chapman. “But the other thing: she clung to people that had problems. She wanted to make everyone feel better. And she clung to those times, trying to help them but then it came to the point, she couldn’t help herself.” 

CRY FOR HELP 

In May of this year, Meghan cried out to her parents for help with a call in the middle of the night. The couple traveled across the state to come home and take Meghan immediately to a rehabilitation facility. 

“That kind of started a process where she checked herself in and we got her into Pine Rest (Christian Mental Health Services),” Reid said. “Then she checked herself out and we weren’t even told she was let go. The hospital didn’t call us. So she was left out on the street because she signed herself out or she was able to be let go. She wasn’t ready to be let go.” 

Reid described her anger and frustration with navigating the system as she and Chapman fought to save their daughter after her release. Reid said she spent all day trying to get a petition to have Meghan checked out. 

“That just ended up being kind of a mess,” Reid said. “They told me that she didn’t have a problem and they let her go.” 

“We are going to carry guilt, I’m sure, (for) the rest of our lives because of things we feel we failed to do,” Chapman said as he held Reid’s hand. 

A ‘SPECIAL LITTLE ANGEL’ 

Chapman, a Shiawassee County Sheriff’s Office employee, knows loss well. 

“(On) Aug. 11 of 2005, I was a working (as a) road sergeant in Shiawassee County, and I lost my daughter to a traffic crash one mile from my home. That I thought I would never survive,” Chapman said. “A perfect kid from the word go. Because of my family friends, partners at work, I was able to get through it. I went through a divorce and then I met Molly and after meeting Molly we just connected because Molly, too, suffered tragedy. 

“The moment I met Meghan, I got this good feeling, it was like she filled a void for me and she was my special little angel,” Chapman said. “As a youngster, she had a great life. Her mom did everything for those kids — her older daughter and her son — to get them the proper help they needed to get through this (their father’s suicide) and she is awesome and is to this day. And so I’m thinking to myself, ‘What the heck did I ever do or we ever do to deserve this?'” 

NEW START FOREVER DELAYED 

Chapman tried to share his experience with Meghan in hopes of saving her. On Sept. 7, 2016 he had her sit in on the daily session of the Shiawassee County Drug Court where he worked. 

Afterward, he tried to convince her to stay at his house in Vernon and serve as a nurse’s aide as she worked toward the nursing degree she was interested in. His only condition was no boyfriend. Meghan’s parents believed her current love interest was taking her down a dangerous road. 

“I said, ‘Other than that, you have your own place,'” Chapman said. “She said, ‘OK, I’m going to give it some thought,’ and then we stayed in touch and she was doing really good.” 

Five days before she died, Meghan sent a text message to Chapman. She was ready to take him up on his offer. 

“It said, ‘I made my decision. I want to come there. I want to get out of this environment that I’m in, I want to get away from the dirty and I want to start over,'” Chapman recollected. “I said, ‘OK, we’re going to make it happen.’ And it didn’t happen soon enough.” 

“I will probably have to work through my own ‘what ifs’ and my own guilt … by trying to get others to become aware of the problem and get on board with what we need to do to make changes and help other people,” Reid said, tears fresh in her eyes. “I believe that’s how we need to channel it.” 

Chapman and Reid’s fight for Meghan is not over. Though she rests beside her dad at Holy Sepulchre Catholic Cemetery in Southfield, they want her pleas for help to reach others who are affected by drug use. 

“We are going to be Meghan’s voice now,” Chapman said. “We have to make a positive out of this negative. And with the help of all of our friends, all of our family, all of the professional people that we know, I’m hoping that we can put our heads together. If we can save one person, it’s worth it. It’s worth it.”

 
Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Crystal Coates

Crystal Coates
Crystal Coates

Angels Info

Name:  Crystal Coates
Age:  24
Location: Canton, Ohio
DOD:  Mar 31, 2017

Angels Obituary:

Crystal L. Coates 

Age 24, of East Canton, passed away unexpectedly Friday March 31, 2017. She was born May 1, 1992 to Daniel S. Bertram and Renee L. Coates. Crystal was a 2010 graduate of East Canton High School. She is preceded in death by one cousin, Steven Dearth; step-father, Michael Leggett. She is survived by her mother, Renee L. Coates; her father, Daniel S. Bertram; one sister, Tiffany Coates; grandparents, Walt and Judy Coates; one aunt, Kris Dearth; two uncles, Bernie Dearth and Chris (Yollanda) Bertram; close cousin, Erica Dearth; special friend, Mason; canine companion, Bailey Mae; many extended family members including, Kerri and Elaina. Friends will be received Wednesday April 5, 2017 from 5-8pm in the Sanders Funeral Home in East Canton. There will be no other public services. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to the family to help defray funeral expenses. Condolences or fond memories may be shared online at www.sanders funeralhomes.com. 
 
Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Brandon Christy

Brandon Christy
Brandon Christy

Angels Info

Name:  Brandon Christy
Age:  29
Location: Acworth, Georgia
DOD:  Apr 29, 2017

Angels Obituary:

Brandon Christy, age 29, of Acworth, Georgia, died April 29, 2017. Funeral Services will be held on Friday, May 5, 2017, 3 PM, at Georgia Funeral Care, 4671 S. Main St., Acworth, Georgia. The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Thursday, May 4, 2017, from 6-8 PM. 
Please express condolences for the family in the comments section below. The Christy family is being cared for by Georgia Funeral Care and Cremation Services, Acworth, Georgia.
 
Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Nadia Esmaeel

Nadia Esmaeel
Gabrielle Carpeno

Angels Info

Name:  Nadia Esmaeel
Age:  29
Location: 
Santa Clarita, California
DOD: May 19, 2017

Angels Obituary:

She was an attractive and vivacious girl who was loved my many people. She had graduated from nursing assistant school at the top of her class and had worked as a cruise line booking agent, earning awards within her company. She had a bright future ahead of her, and then she was introduced to heroin. 

Nadia had just passed her 29th birthday when she died. 

My daughter never wanted anyone to know she was an addict, so I was not allowed to discuss the topic with anyone but my closest friends. She was ashamed and embarrassed of that fact, and how the world would perceive her. This is the stigma most addicts face. If a person has a disease like cancer, others might immediately feel a good deal of empathy – whereas the disease of addiction usually brings up thoughts like- “oh that person has no will power” , “why can’t they just stop” or “try a dose of tough love to get them to hit rock bottom, that will work”. The perception of, discrimination against, and misinformation about addicts and their disease is just one part of the challenge toward getting help for this epidemic level scourge that is sweeping our nation. 

One of the most dangerous times in the life of an addict is not when they are in active addiction. It is in the time directly after they have had a clean period, either been through detox and/or rehabilitation. During this time, their tolerance level is very low, and if they enter a period of relapse or try to go back to their normal dose of their drug of choice, it can be deadly. This is what happened to Nadia. 

We are raising the money to have a decent burial and service for this beautiful girl, a bright light upon the earth that burned out way too soon. Additional funds raised over and above the cost of her burial will go toward the forming of an addict advocacy group and/or will be given to a detox/ rehab facility in Nadia’s name to provide addiction treatment for worthy Santa Clarita Valley addicts who cannot afford the services. 

thank you very much for caring- 
Deanna Esmaeel (mother) 
Marty York (brother)

Originally Posted HERE
Please support Heroin Angels by making a donation to help make sure we're able to continue this fight
Posted on December 10, 2017

Gabrielle Carpeno

Gabrielle Carpeno
Gabrielle Carpeno

Angels Info

Name:  Gabrielle Carpeno
Age:  17
Location: 
Attleboro, Massachusetts
DOD: Jun 20, 2017

Angels Obituary:

The nationwide opioid epidemic hit home Tuesday when an Attleboro High School student died of a heroin overdose just one day before finishing her junior year. 

Chris Carpeno said his 17-year-old daughter Gabrielle Carpeno’s death was halting to her family. 

“Kids on the street now have no idea what this stuff is,” he said. “The police told us it only takes one try. We don’t know who gave it to her or how this happened.” 


But he hopes his daughter will be remembered for the life she brought to those around her instead of the way she died. 

Gabrielle was affectionately known to family and friends as “Gigi” or “Gabby.” 

“She was a great kid,” Carpeno said. “She was just full of life. She loved horses — she had a horse in South Attleboro, and she was going to go to equestrian school after high school to learn how to take care of them. 

“She had a huge future ahead of her. That’s what I want people to know.” 

Friends on Facebook remembered the girl as caring, sweet and loving. 

“(She) always greeted everyone with a hug and smile,” family friend Sheri Quaglia said. 

Attleboro High School Principal Bill Runey said the 17-year-old junior was on track to graduate next year and would be remembered by staff and students for her bright smile. 

“She was a very quiet young lady,” Runey said. “She was very shy but she always had a very engaging smile on her face that endeared her to her teachers and classmates here.”

Carpeno attended Attleboro schools for most of her educational career except for a two-year stint at Bristol County Agricultural School. 

Close friends and teachers were made aware of her condition after she was admitted to the hospital Saturday, Runey said, but the larger school community learned of her death only after dismissal Tuesday afternoon. 

Wednesday is the last day of school.

Originally Posted HERE
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