Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Man arrested after woman overdoses

- LYNN LAROWE

Counterfei­t oxycodone pills may be involved in a fentanyl overdose that sent an 18-yearold Texarkana woman to the hospital and the man accused of selling drugs to her to jail last month, authoritie­s said.

Conner Douglas Morgan, 21, was arrested Dec. 22 in connection with a Texarkana, Texas, woman who was treated for a reported fentanyl overdose the night of Dec. 19. Morgan has been charged with delivery of a controlled substance resulting in serious bodily injury.

According to a probable cause affidavit, Morgan sold three blue pills stamped M30 to the woman for $30 apiece the evening of Dec. 19. Twoand-a-half blue bills stamped M30 were found in the woman’s bedroom by her mother after the overdose and given to Texarkana, Texas, police officers.

According to the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s website, blue pills stamped with M30 are oxycodone, a powerful prescripti­on opioid pain reliever. The pills collected from the overdose victim’s bedroom reportedly “field tested” positive for fentanyl, a synthetic opioid more powerful than morphine.

The woman’s mother found her unresponsi­ve the evening of Dec. 19 and was unable to wake her. When the woman’s breathing stopped, the mother performed CPR until first responders arrived. The woman told police investigat­or Colten Johnson that she was informed by hospital staff that she would not have survived if she had not been found by her mother and given emergency medical attention.

According to authoritie­s, the woman reported that she ingested the drug while sitting in Morgan’s car at her home in Texarkana, Texas. The woman told Johnson that after taking the drug she went back in her home and remembers nothing after about 7:30 p.m. that night, authoritie­s said.

The use of fentanyl in street drugs such as methamphet­amine, cocaine and heroin as a cheap alternativ­e or additive has been associated with a rise in overdose deaths. Counterfei­t pills containing fentanyl but stamped to look like genuine prescripti­on drugs such as opioids, tranquiliz­ers and stimulants, are a growing problem too, according to the DEA site.

Morgan’s bail on the drug charge has been set at $75,000. However, his bond on a pending robbery charge has been revoked and he is being held without bond in that case.

Bowie County records show Morgan pleaded guilty to robbery at a hearing Dec. 13 before 5th District Judge Bill Miller but has not been sentenced. Docket entries in the case show Miller order a presentenc­e investigat­ion be prepared by the Bowie County Community Supervisio­n and Correction­s Department as is common in cases when a judge is considerin­g a term of probation.

A pre-sentence investigat­ion report typically includes informatio­n about a defendant meant to aid a judge at sentencing. The reports often include recommenda­tions for special programs, such as drug treatment or money management, for example.

Morgan’s robbery case is currently scheduled to take place on Jan. 24 for sentencing before Miller.

According to a probable cause affidavit in that case, Morgan and three or four other men attacked two men in March 2020 at a residence in Nash, Texas. One of the men injured in the attack was “covered head to toe with multiple bruises and cuts” and still wore a hospital bracelet on his wrist when he made a report to Nash police March 8, 2020.

The man reported that he was invited to a party at the residence and that he and a friend who went with him were “jumped” when they entered. The man reported that his shoes, hoodie and wallet containing $150 in cash, his driver’s license and Social Security card had been taken.

A video of the attack was posted to Snapchat by Morgan and viewed by investigat­ors with the Nash Police Department, authoritie­s said. The video showed the two men being beaten and one man’s shoes and hoodie being removed during the assault, according to authoritie­s.

Charges remain pending against at least two of Morgan’s co-defendants in the robbery case. One defendant in the case was sentenced Dec. 13 to a five-year term of deferred adjudicati­on probation. If a defendant successful­ly completes a deferred adjudicati­on probation, their criminal history will not reflect a final felony conviction.

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