State prisons are seeing a troubling sign of fathers, sons, brothers and cousins being reunited behind bars. Continue reading →

State prisons are seeing a troubling sign of fathers, sons, brothers and cousins being reunited behind bars. Continue reading →
People who work within the United States corrections face monumental obstacles in creating a safe work environment and keeping violent inmates in line. Continue reading →
Terre Haute and Vincennes, you’ve been hit by something and don’t even realize it.
Continue reading →
This past Saturday night, the Democrats and CBS decided in the midst of some really good college football games being played and Continue reading →
Go ahead, be a big time sympathizer of inmates in American prisons but you’re the fool in the end.
Continue reading →
Running this blog and my career choice, I’ve gained numerous law enforcement sources who I value in obtaining up to the minute information with what is happening on the ground. Continue reading →
With the Supreme Court ruling in favor of same sex marriage many states will have to be looking at multiple layers of rule changes. Hoosier Econ reached out to the Indiana Department of Corrections on this issue.
The Washington Examiner did some digging on illegal immigrants entering into our legal system. The numbers are telling compared to
Continue reading →
Heroin is clobbering the state of Indiana and it comes with an enormous financial cost. Law enforcement, imprisonment, children removed from homes and other costs are all there for many to dissect. The DEA recently put out an alert of a possible explanation of why people are overdosing on heroin.
In the last two years, DEA has seen a significant resurgence in fentanyl-related seizures. According to the National Forensic Laboratory Information System (NFLIS), state and local labs reported 3,344 fentanyl submissions in 2014, up from 942 in 2013. In addition, DEA has identified 15 other fentanyl-related compounds.
Fentanyl is a Schedule II narcotic used as an analgesic and anesthetic. It is the most potent opioid available for use in medical treatment – 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and 30 to 50 times more potent than heroin. Fentanyl is potentially lethal, even at very low levels. Ingestion of small doses as small as 0.25 mg can be fatal. Its euphoric effects are indistinguishable from morphine or heroin.
Costs associated with saving an overdosing addict are skyrocketing as well. More municipalities are wanting police to carry heroin antidotes since they are usually first to encounter a person overdosing. Foxnews.com had a post about the antidote naloxone.