Police, public health officials investigate possible drug use tied to 7 recent deaths in Longueuil - Action News
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Montreal

Police, public health officials investigate possible drug use tied to 7 recent deaths in Longueuil

The Montrgie department of public health said it is investigating six of seven deaths in the last two weeks in the Longueuil area as possible drug overdoses.

Public health officials say they believe 6 of 7 deaths over last 2 weeks could be drug overdoses

While police are still waiting on the results of toxicology tests, many of the people that died had been drug users, said Longueuil police Const. Jean-Pierre Voutsinos. (Charles Constant / CBC)

Seven people have died in the last two weeks in Longueuil, leading police and public health officials to look into the possibility that drug overdoses could be the cause.

The region, just south of Montreal, has never seen this many deaths in such a short period of time, said Longueuil police spokesperson Const. Jean-Pierre Voutsinos.

While police are still waiting forthe results of toxicology tests, many of the people that died had been drug users, Voutsinos toldCBC News.

"We do know that some of them had medical issues," he said. "That's why we really aren't sure if the drug usage led to their deaths."

6 of 7 deaths are suspected overdoses

According to Dr. Julie Loslier, director of the Montrgie department of public health, said the department is treating six of the sevendeaths as suspected drug overdoses.

The department is takingsteps to confirm their causes, Loslier said, and if they were overdoses, it will also determine which drugs were consumed.

At least one of the people who died thought he was buying cocaine, but the drugwas laced with heroin and another drug used to treat malaria, Loslier said.

She said the public health department is working closely with police, local pharmacies, emergency services and community outreach workers to investigate drug use in the area.

"It's a team effort," she said.

With files from CBC Montreal's Valeria Cori-Monacchio and Radio-Canada's Gravel le matin