Leeds mother's plea after tragic son took drug 50 times stronger than heroin
Gary Edwards, 35, is believed to have been drug free for more than six years when he died after relapsing and taking drugs which contained fentanyl last November.
An inquest at Wakefield Coroner’s Court heard Mr Edwards, of Chapel Allerton, Leeds, died as a result of fentanyl and morphine toxicity.
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Hide AdSpeaking after the inquest, his mother Debbie Edwards, 56, said her son went off the rails as a child after his father Ray died aged 52 when Gary was ten-years-old.
She said he started using cannabis aged 15, went on to use cocaine and by his late twenties he had become a crack cocaine and heroin addict.
When he was 29 he went into an 18-month rehabilitation programme in Scotland with the Christian Teen Challenge organisation.
She said he became a youth leader aged around 32 with the Bridge Street Community Church in Burmantofts, Leeds.
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Hide AdMrs Edwards said he raised around £6,000 to set up the Mission to Calais organisation to help children living in the former Jungle refugee and migrant camp in France.
He also visited Romania on three occasions as part of a project to help build and maintain school for underprivileged children.
Mrs Edwards said: “Gary had a real zest for life.
“Everyone who met him couldn’t forget him because he was such a big character and so full of life.
“His passion was youth and trying to stop kids making the same mistakes as he did.”
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Hide AdMrs Edwards said: “He had a relapse and that was it, it’s killed him.
“Nobody knows what they are taking anymore. Gary would never in a million years have taken anything that he thought would kill him.
“One tiny bit of fentanyl and you have got no chance of surviving.
“The dealers might as well go around sticking a gun to people’s heads and shooting them.
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Hide Ad“I would urge people never to take any illegal substances because you never know what you are taking.”
Mrs Edwards said when her son was younger she always feared receiving phone call informing her of his death.
She added: “After six years those fears had gone.
“After he went into rehab I never thought I would be in that situation again.
“But addicts do relapse. One fix killed him. My whole world just fell apart.”
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Hide AdA coroner recorded a verdict of drug related death after an inquest heard Mr Edwards had potentially fatal levels of fentanyl in his system.
The inquest at Wakefield Coroner’s Court was told police broke into the Chapel Allerton home of 35-year-old Gary Edwards on the evening of November 13 2017 after a friend raised concerns about him.
Police discovered Mr Edwards in an unresponsive state and he was pronounced dead by paramedics just after 10pm that night
The inquest heard that consultant histopathologist Dr Lisa Barker carried out a post mortem.
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Hide AdThe inquest was told there were potentially fatal levels of fentanyl in his system and high morphine levels along with signs of cocaine use.
Area coroner Jonathan Leach said toxicology tests were also carried out, adding: “Because he was using morphine as well as fentanyl, these drugs have a respiratory effect.
“They make your relax and go to sleep. If you take too much, not only do you go to sleep, you stop breathing.”
Recording a verdict of drug related death, Mr Leach said: “It is clear from what I have read and heard from his mum that Gary was a 35-year-old single man.
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Hide Ad“He had a long history of drug misuse. He had a loving and supportive family and his mother was in regular contact with him on the morning of November 11.
“Two days later a friend raised concerns about him and as a result police attended his home on Stainbeck Lane at Chapel Allerton, Leeds, and found him unresponsive.
“Paramedics attended and certified death at 10.10pm.
“A post mortem was carried out by Dr Barker and she gives her view as the medical cause of death as fentanyl and morphine toxicity.”
The National Crime Agency confirmed last September it was investigating the threat posed by the supply and consumption of synthetic opioid fentanyl.
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Hide AdThere were deaths in Yorkshire and the Humber, prompting warnings about heroin laced with fentanyl.
Fentanyl has a legitimate medical use as a painkiller, but is highly toxic and as little as 0.002g of fentanyl (within a typical 0.1g heroin deal) is potentially fatal.
Fentanyl is around 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine.