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Office of the Maine AG: News & Reports

July 15, 2021 BREWER - Attorney General Aaron M. Frey participated in Governor Janet Mills s third Opioid Summit today, speaking live from the Bangor Area Recovery Network (BARN) center in Brewer. The attorney generals remarks focused on efforts to prevent overdose deaths, to disrupt the flow of fentanyl into Maine, and to expand access to treatment. As attorney general, I see the impact of the continued impact of the opioid epidemic on families, communities, and our state, said Frey. I am grateful that the administration has continued to make this crisis a top priority and marshalled the resources of every corner of our state government in working to save lives and abate the crisis. I am particularly encouraged by the recent creation of the Accidental Overdose Death Review Panel, which will examine systems and practices with the goal of saving lives.

Rosanna Boyce: Treatment, not jail, needed amid opioid crisis

Read Article Maine’s leaders have never suggested arresting and criminally charging people who test positive for COVID-19 and locking them up in jail. Why is this? Could it be that no physicians, epidemiologists, or public health experts have recommended criminalizing COVID-19 as a way to address the pandemic? Can one imagine Maine’s Department of Public Safety saying we should arrest people with COVID-19? This sounds ridiculous, but it’s exactly what the state is doing to address the other public health pandemic the opioid crisis. The Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee on April 30 heard over three hours of testimony in favor of LD 967 from community members, including addiction medicine doctors. The law would remove criminal penalties for low-level drug possession, making it a civil offense and offer people connections to treatment.

UPDATE: Castle Builders owner Malcolm Stewart indicted by Knox County Grand Jury

UPDATE: Castle Builders owner Malcolm Stewart indicted by Knox County Grand Jury Sarah Shepherd Sun, 04/11/2021 - 6:30pm ROCKLAND (April 11) The attorney for Malcolm Stewart, 56, who was indicted by the Knox County grand jury in March for theft by deception from consumers throughout the Midcoast, has filed a motion in Knox County court to arrange a hearing for his client to turn himself in to the court on an arrest warrant.   The court issued a warrant for Stewart’s arrest warrant March 25 and set bail at $50,000 cash. He is now residing in Pelzer, South Carolina.   Stewart, the owner of Castle Builders in Union, closed his business without notice after he allegedly collected deposits of over $400,000 from 57 consumers for home construction projects that he knew he did not have the capacity to complete, Maine Attorney General Aaron M. Frey said in a news release.  

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