Feds Launch ‘Pills, Needles & Designer Drugs’ School Blitz

The streets of Mississippi are bleeding out from a synthetic slaughter — a flood of bath salts, spice, and crushing opioid waves that are hooking kids before they even hit high school. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi isn’t waiting for body counts to climb. They’ve launched a no-holds-barred classroom offensive with a 45-minute gut-punch program titled ‘Pills, Needles & Designer Drugs,’ aimed straight at the jugular of youth drug culture.

First blood went to Jeff Davis Elementary in Biloxi on October 27, 2016, where federal prosecutors and law enforcement didn’t sugarcoat the horror show of addiction. Then, over November 2–3, Biloxi High School students got the unfiltered truth — needles, overdoses, ER codes, and the chemical warfare being sold as ‘legal highs.’ St. Patrick’s Catholic High School is next, with the presentation scheduled for November 29th, bringing federal heat directly into private school hallways.

The program doesn’t play nice. It’s a raw, frank dissection of the opiates and designer drugs tearing through Gulf Coast communities — substances that mimic cocaine, meth, and LSD but come with a body count that emergency rooms can’t keep up with. A custom short film produced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Birmingham drives the message home with real footage and real consequences. Then, medical personnel from local ERs step in — not to lecture, but to testify.

These doctors and nurses aren’t reading from scripts. They’re recounting the twitching bodies, the psychotic breaks, the near-deads rolled in on stretchers after snorting ‘bath salts’ bought off a gas station shelf. They’ve seen teens hallucinate for days, fry their nervous systems, and wake up in restraints. That’s the frontline, and now it’s entering the classroom.

School superintendents who want this program in their districts are told to call the U.S. Attorney’s Office directly at (228) 563-1560 and ask for Melissa Dunn. No middlemen. No bureaucracy. Just a direct line to bring the truth — unfiltered and unapproved by PR teams — into schools where kids are already being targeted by dealers disguised as trendsetters.

And the feds aren’t just talking. They’re recruiting. Medical professionals who’ve fought these chemical monsters in emergency bays are urged to volunteer their time, to stand in front of students and say: ‘I’ve held your classmates as they seized. Don’t let me hold you too.’ This isn’t a campaign. It’s a counterattack — and it’s hitting schools before the drugs do.

RELATED: DEA Targets Opioid Crisis in New England Take Back Day

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