PAINKILLER USE BREEDS NEW FACE OF HEROIN ADDICTION (video)

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Screen Shot 2012-06-20 at 9.52.11 AM.pngBy: Yardena Schwartz

Chicago Police Capt. John Roberts never thought that moving to the suburbs would mean that his 14-year-old son Billy would immediately be introduced to drugs. And never did he ever imagine that Billy, a high school athlete, would even think of touching heroin.

After 33 years in the Chicago Police Department, Roberts was finally ready to retire. He couldn't wait to move his family out to the suburbs, where he thought his kids would live in a safer environment, attend better schools and be sheltered from some of the ugly realities of city life.

But after growing addicted to prescription painkillers, Billy and his friends could no longer afford their habit. They soon turned to heroin, which they could buy for a tenth of the price of their favorite pill, Oxycontin. Billy was 19 when he died of a heroin overdose, but he wasn't the only one of his friends to suffer that fate.

At first, Roberts couldn't believe what was happening to his family , and that heroin could affect a good kid like Billy. But then he realized he wasn't alone.  

Across the country, heroin use is growing at an alarming rate and is affecting a surprising segment of the population.

"Kids in the city know not to touch it, but the message never got out to the suburbs," said Roberts, who founded the Heroin Epidemic Relief Organization to help other families cope with the shock of teen heroin use. Like most parents in upper-middle class neighborhoods, Roberts said, "We didn't think it would ever be a problem out here."

Continue Reading: msnbc.com

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