CLEVELAND — A 4-year-old boy seen in a viral photo in the backseat of a van while his grandmother and her boyfriend were passed out from drug overdoses has found a new home.
NBC News reports the boy will be going to live with his great aunt and great uncle in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
A safety director in a city that released photos said he and others wanted to send a message to addicts they should find safe places for their children when using debilitating drugs.
The photos were taken Wednesday in East Liverpool, a city of about 11,000 residents along the Ohio River, and were posted to the police department’s Facebook page Thursday.
Safety Director Brian Allen said city officials initially struggled with the decision to make the photos public but he wouldn’t hesitate to do it again.
An East Liverpool police officer was driving to work when the couple stopped behind a school bus. When the bus drove off, the officer saw the couple’s car drifting before it came to a stop, police said.
Officers photographed the couple and the vehicle for evidence, Allen said, and released the photos after the man’s guilty pleas ended his criminal case. The adults were unconscious by the time an ambulance crew arrived and likely would have died if they hadn’t received an opiate antidote, he said.
Police said they found evidence the adults had used a mixture of heroin and fentanyl.
Posting the photos could be seen as a type of punishment but also as a public relations tool to try to stop people from becoming addicted in the first place, said Wes Oliver, director of the Criminal Justice Program at Duquesne University School of Law in Pittsburgh. He likened it to successful anti-smoking campaigns in recent years using photos showing the graphic physical effects of tobacco use.
“I like the approach about trying to get the public from ever starting using these drugs rather than thinking about how to lock them up once they’ve started,” he said.
East Liverpool has been inundated by the heroin epidemic the last three or four years, Allen said. The city sits at a crossroads between Cleveland and Pittsburgh that draws sellers and users alike, he added.
State and federal help is needed to provide treatment options while police attempt to control the problem from the supply side, Allen said. The city plans to engage neighborhood watch groups to report drug dealing and drug use when they see it, he said.