Fentanyl exposure leads Alameda Co. sheriff's sergeant to save detective's life

Lisa Amin Gulezian Image
ByLisa Amin Gulezian KGO logo
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Fentanyl exposure leads Alameda Co. sheriff's sergeant to save detective's life
An Alameda County sheriff's sergeant and detective are recovering after being exposed to a lethal dose of the potent opioid fentanyl while conducting a drug investigation in a motel room in unincorporated Hayward on Friday.

HAYWARD, California -- Medics rushed to the Motel 6 on Industrial Parkway in unincorporated Hayward after an undercover Alameda County Narcotics detective and his sergeant walked into Room 278 for a drug bust.



Neither realized they were exposed to a microscopic cloud of the deadly drug fentanyl.



The detective caught the brunt of it.



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Sgt. Ray Kelly is with the Alameda County Sheriff's Dept. and said, "(At) one point he went into respiratory distress and stopped breathing, his lips turned blue and his eyes rolled back in his head and he went unconscious."



Alameda County narcotics, patrol deputies, and even K-9 units carry a dose of Narcan - an antidote to an opioid overdose - on hand.



But it didn't work.



Then they administered a second dose, which worked.



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But then the sergeant got sick from cross contamination from the detective. He refused to take the last available dose, just in case someone else needed it.



Friday was a wakeup call for Alameda County Sheriff Greg Ahern.



"We have to acquire more of these devices and make them more readily available," Ahern said.



The epidemic is growing and not all agencies carry Narcan.



Investigators believe fentanyl and other drugs were being mixed in room 278.



And anyone could have been exposed.



Motel guests said, "That's scary!" Another said, "I'm scared to sleep in my room!"



The sheriff hopes to have a thousand doses of Narcan available for his department by the end of this year.



SEE ALSO: What is Fentanyl?

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