Connect with us

CBS News

Drug “several times” stronger than fentanyl linked to California overdose death

Avatar

Published

on


Opioid “several times” stronger than fentanyl linked to California overdose death


Opioid “several times” stronger than fentanyl linked to California overdose death

01:17

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Los Angeles office filed charges in what could be the nation’s first death-resulting criminal case involving a synthetic opioid that is possibly more dangerous than fentanyl.

On Thursday, federal prosecutors announced the sole count of distribution of protonitazene resulting in death against 21-year-old Benjamin Anthony Collins, a resident of LA County. He faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in prison if convicted. The harshest possible punishment for this charge is life in prison. 

The Justice Department claims that Collins knowingly and intentionally sold the pills to a 22-year-old man on April 19, 2024, according to the indictment.

To compare, the fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroin. Protonitazene is three times more powerful than fentanyl.

The young man took some of the pills in the front seat of his car soon after allegedly buying them from Collins. The Justice Department said he died quickly after taking the drugs. His mother found him dead inside his parked car outside of her home. 

The Center of Forensic Science Research and Education believes the novel opioid entered the illicit drug market in North America sometime before May 2021. The Justice Department believes this is the first death-resulting criminal case involving protonitazene in the nation.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioid overdose deaths have dropped to their lowest numbers in three years, but remain at higher levels than before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The agency’s provisional figures show that there have been 75,091 opioid overdose deaths in the U.S. for the year ending in April. Last summer, the U.S. reached more than 86,000 estimated annual deaths.

Pre-pandemic, there were fewer than 50,000 fatal overdoses a year. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Sheriff says Wisconsin man revealed how he faked his death, fled to Europe

Avatar

Published

on


Wisconsin man accused of faking his own death reveals how he did it


Wisconsin man accused of faking his own death reveals how he did it

00:36

GREEN LAKE, Wis. — Authorities are urging a Wisconsin man accused of faking his death and fleeing to Europe to come home to spend the holidays with his wife and three children.

Ryan Borgwardt, 45, went missing on Aug. 12 while kayaking in Green Lake, about 50 miles northeast of Wisconsin Dells. Crews spent 54 days searching the lake, which is more than 200 feet deep at points, to no avail. 

The entire search effort cost nearly $40,000, according to Green Lake County Sheriff Mark Podoll.

“Great news, we know that he’s alive and well,” Podoll said in a press conference on Thursday. “And, well, the bad news is that we don’t know where Ryan exactly is, and he has not decided to return home.”

Podoll says investigators have been in email contact with Borgwardt since earlier this month and played a cellphone video he had sent them on Nov. 11.

“I’m in my apartment. I am safe, secure,” Borgwardt said in the video.

Podoll says Borgwardt has since admitted to staging his disappearance by overturning his kayak, padding back to shore in a smaller boat, riding his e-bike to a bus station, and then departing for Canada before flying to Europe.  

10p-sot-kayaker-fake-wcco6jkj.jpg
Ryan Borgwardt

Green Lake Co. Sheriff’s Office


Podoll says his investigators discovered in early October that Borgwardt had entered Canada a day after his disappearance. He synced his laptop to the cloud a few days earlier, swapped out his hard drive and cleared his search history.

They also determined he had taken out a $375,000 life insurance policy months earlier, transferred money into a foreign bank and was in contact with a woman living in Uzbekistan.

Podell became emotional during Thursday’s press conference, saying Borgwardt’s family wants him to return home. He implored Borgwardt to “clean up the mess that he has created.”

“Christmas is coming, and what better gift he could give his kids is to be there for Christmas with them,” Podell said.

The sheriff didn’t confirm if any criminal charges are in the works.

Borgwardt is from Watertown, located about 50 miles west of Milwaukee.  



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman on record growth and the future of women’s soccer

Avatar

Published

on


NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman on record growth and the future of women’s soccer – CBS News


Watch CBS News



NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman joins “CBS Mornings Plus” to talk about the NWSL’s record-breaking season with over 2 million fans and discusses plans to build on the league’s success. Despite pay disparities with men’s sports, Berman says women’s soccer is on a rapid upward trajectory.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Replacing JD Vance in the U.S. Senate sets off scramble in Ohio

Avatar

Published

on


Sen. JD Vance’s election as vice president has opened up one of Ohio’s U.S. Senate seats for the third time in as many years, setting off a scramble for the appointment among the state’s ruling Republicans.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine is tasked with filling the vacancy, giving the pragmatic center-right politician a hand in setting his party’s course in the state potentially for years to come. His decision will be made in the afterglow of sweeping wins by Republicans in November under the leadership of President-elect Donald Trump, but a poor choice could also help Democrats reclaim a place in Ohio’s Senate delegation when the seat comes up for reelection in less than two years.

“Look, being a United States senator is a big deal,” DeWine told reporters in the days after the election. “It’s a big deal for the state, and we need to get it right.”

DeWine has a long list to choose from — particularly given the number of GOP candidates who competed unsuccessfully in Senate primaries in 2022 and 2024. Those under consideration who previously lost crowded Republican primaries are former Ohio Republican Chair Jane Timken; two-term Secretary of State Frank LaRose; and state Sen. Matt Dolan, whose family owns baseball’s Cleveland Guardians. Two-term Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague and Republican attorney and strategist Mehek Cooke, a frequent guest on Fox News, are also in the mix.

One other prospective appointee — a 2024 presidential contender, Cincinnati pharmaceutical entrepreneur and Vance insider Vivek Ramaswamy — pulled out of contention after accepting a position in the new Trump administration.

While Vance’s departure also offers DeWine an opportunity to alleviate a bottleneck at the top of Ohio Republicans’ political pecking order, where Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and Attorney General Dave Yost are preparing to face off for governor in 2026, that appears unlikely. Husted is well into building his campaign organization, and Yost has said he would decline the appointment if offered. DeWine — a 77-year-old former U.S. senator term-limited in 2026 — also has said he would not appoint himself.

Meanwhile, ambitions for the seat among Republican members of Ohio’s congressional delegation — which includes U.S. Reps. Jim Jordan, Mike Carey, David Joyce and Warren Davidson — are being tempered by the slim House majority their party scored in November. House vacancies necessarily take months to fill under Ohio’s election protocols, likely a consideration for DeWine as Trump prepares to push early policy priorities through Congress.

Under state law, whoever gets the appointment will serve from the date of Vance’s resignation, which he hasn’t yet announced, until Dec. 15, 2026. A special election for the last two years of his six-year term would be held in November 2026.

That special election could provide a comeback opportunity for Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, who was unseated earlier this month by Cleveland businessman Bernie Moreno. Though he wasn’t specific, Brown told Politico last week: “I’m going to stay in this arena. I’m not going away.” Former U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, the Democratic Senate nominee who lost to Vance in 2022, could make another run, too. And Allison Russo, the Democratic leader of the Ohio House, also has been mentioned as a 2026 Senate contender.

DeWine has made clear that he wants the Republican he chooses to be well positioned to defeat the Democrats in 2026. Their strengths as a statewide candidate and fundraiser are particularly important because Ohio’s statewide elections also take place that year — and every seat is open. A strong incumbent senator at the top of that ticket could be valuable to returning Republicans to the offices of governor, attorney general, treasurer, auditor and secretary of state.

Stamina also could be a factor. Timken ran for Senate most recently in 2022, LaRose ran this year, and Dolan ran both times. A win in 2026 would only give the victor a two-year reprieve before having to face Ohio voters again in 2028.

“This is not for the faint-hearted,” DeWine said.

Dolan, who along with Timken is a millionaire, is rare among Republicans competing for the Vance appointment in not having ever won Trump’s backing.

In both 2022 and 2024, Dolan ran in Republicans’ moderate lane, declining to align with Trump and disavowing his false claims that voter fraud lost him the 2020 election. Those stances won him DeWine’s endorsement in last year’s Senate primary, which could be a good sign for the term-limited Ohio Senate Finance chairman.

The president-elect backed Vance in 2022 and Moreno this year — lifting both to victory. Moreno won a three-way Republican primary against Dolan and LaRose, while Vance topped a field of seven, before both went on to defeat Democratic opponents in now reliably red Ohio.

In the state Legislature, Dolan opposed Ohio’s now-blocked ban on abortions once fetal cardiac activity is detected and an unsuccessful effort to override then-Gov. John Kasich’s veto. Both LaRose and Sprague, then a state senator and representative, respectively, supported both the bill and the override effort.

Timken, a Trump loyalist, has never held public office, but as a Senate candidate she described herself as “a powerful ally for the pro-life movement” and supported overturning Roe v. Wade.

Former U.S. Sen. Rob Portman backed Timken in the 2022 Senate primary, calling the Harvard-educated attorney and wife of former TimkenSteel CEO Tim Timken a smart, hard-working conservative.

Some believe DeWine’s penchant for elevating women could give her or Cooke an edge in the competition. Both his chief of staff and communications director are women and more than half of his Cabinet is female.

Though Trump endorsed Vance over Timken for Senate in 2022, he had earlier hand-selected her to lead the Ohio Republican Party after his first election in 2016, and he has since supported her election as RNC National Committeewoman for Ohio.

While Trump also passed over LaRose for a Senate endorsement this year, he had backed both him and Sprague in bids for statewide office — and both have endorsed him back.

Both have twice won statewide races, though LaRose’s high profile as Ohio’s elections chief keeps him in the headlines more than Sprague, and he would be the first Green Beret to serve in the Senate. At the same time, the absence of controversy that has marked Sprague’s tenure at the state treasury could make him less likely than LaRose to draw a primary challenger.

DeWine says he wants his appointee to be focused on both state and national issues and willing to work hard and “get things done.” He also hinted that the person’s politics can’t be too extreme.

“It also has to be someone who can win a primary, it has to be someone who can win a general election, and then two years later do all that again,” he said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.