Pubdate: Wed, 17 Aug 2005
Source: New York Daily News (NY)
Copyright: 2005 Daily News, L.P.
Contact:  http://www.nydailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/295
Author: Alison GEndar, Rich Schapiro, Robert F. Moor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

BAD HEROIN TIED TO 6 DEATHS

Police Taking Aim At Downtown Scourge

A deadly batch of heroin may have killed six people over five days in 
downtown Manhattan - including two college coeds found with fresh needle 
marks on their arms, police and health officials warned yesterday.

The tainted smack could be fatally pure or altered with a poisonous additive.

"We are taking steps to locate and isolate the source and arrest whoever 
might be behind it," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.

Alarmed by the number of deaths and the discovery that the fatalities were 
in such a narrow swath of Manhattan - below 14th St. - police urged 
expedited toxicology tests on the victims, including the 18-year-old 
students Maria Pesantez and Mellie Carballo.

"If I can save one life from the hands of these criminals who are doing 
this to young girls, my daughter did not die in vain," Mariel Carballo said 
just hours after burying her daughter.

Carballo raged at Roberto Martinez, 41, and Alfredo Morales, 33, the 
ex-cons who cops say were with her daughter and Pesantez when they 
overdosed Friday inside Morales' apartment at 484 E. Houston St.

Law enforcement sources revealed yesterday that Martinez was busted in the 
late 1990s for being a member of a notorious heroin gang the Cut Throat 
Crew, which earned $150,000 a week by selling drugs on the lower East Side.

"If these men were my daughter's and Maria's friends, why didn't they come 
to the funeral?" asked Mariel Carballo, 41, outside her West Side apartment.

"If they were my daughter's friends, I'd expect them to look me in my eyes 
like all of the rest of my daughter's friends."

Martinez was hit with a parole violation last night and was in police 
custody, according to sources, who said his urine had tested positive for 
drugs.

The first victim of the deadly heroin may have been Kristopher Korkowski, 
24, a hairdresser from Minnesota. He was found dead Aug. 10 in an apartment 
at 223 Avenue B.

Two days later, Ivan Rivera, 24, overdosed in a hallway of 238 E. Seventh 
St. Carballo and Pesantez also overdosed that night. Carballo, a Hunter 
College freshman, died shortly after cops found her. Pesantez, a sophomore 
at New York University from Queens, died Sunday.

Cops grew concerned about a potential bad batch of heroin after the teens' 
deaths and the discovery Saturday of 37-year-old Charles Sicker, who 
overdosed in a portable toilet near W. 13th St.

"A detective called me Saturday to tell me there had been other overdoses," 
Korkowski's father, Pete, said from his home in Circle Pines, Minn.

But with roughly 900 drug-related deaths a year - almost twice the number 
of murders - police did not make the suspected connection public until 
Anatoli Silistovich, 42, was found dead Monday in a storage facility on 
Spring St.

Cops were questioning drug dealers, suspected addicts and confidential 
informants to track down the source of the drugs, and also were reviewing 
overdoses as far back as June.

Martinez and Morales have denied giving Carballo and Pesantez drugs. 
Martinez told cops he met Carballo, who dreamed of becoming a model or a 
psychologist, at the Dark Room, a club on Ludlow St.

Carballo's relatives said Martinez would sign his text messages to her with 
"K.C." - possibly a nod to his nickname Krazy Cat from his days with the 
Cut Throat Crew when he allegedly sold packets of heroin with brand names 
like Overtime, Raw Dog and Good News.

Residents on the lower East Side said a potent brand of heroin called Eden 
is popular in the area, primarily on Avenue D between E. Fourth and E. 
Fifth Sts. It costs about $15 a bag.

"People don't understand how dangerous heroin is," said Patti Kelly, 50, of 
the East Village. "This area is a playground for kids to do what they want 
to do. There are no boundaries."

With Austin Fenner and Barbara Ross
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MAP posted-by: Beth