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FBI, DEA release graphic video about horrors of heroin use

WASHINGTON — Heroin is stronger than you, so don鈥檛 start abusing it or prescription pills.

That鈥檚 the message being hammered home by the FBI and DEA in a graphic, uncensored film.

鈥 combines the tragic stories of seven people, whose lives and those of their families were permanently altered by their drug use.

One of the stories is the rapid downward spiral of 16-year-old Cierra. She was a well-adjusted teenager and competitive cheerleader, who after taking what FBI director James Comey called a wrong turn, found herself in the fight of her life.

She was a convicted felon at the age of 18,鈥 said her mother, Patricia Vallejo, in the film.

Shortly after returning home from a seven-month jail sentence — seemingly cured — Cierra took another turn no one saw coming.

鈥淒inner was done, and I鈥檓 hollering for the kids,鈥 Patricia recalled. 鈥淢y son and nephew come down, and Cierra doesn鈥檛 come down. I鈥檓 like, 鈥榮he fell asleep or something.鈥

鈥淪o I go upstairs, and I鈥檓 knocking, and knocking, and knocking on the door, and there is no answer. I open that door, and my little girl is on the floor dead.鈥

April 20, 2026 | Heroin abuse takes a devastating turn (Patricia Vallejo)

Melissa is also featured.

鈥淚 met my first husband when I was very young,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was 13, and then we got married at 17, so I got to grow up pretty quick.鈥

Melissa was 22 years old when her addiction started. 鈥淚 got pregnant with my youngest daughter. Once I had her, they gave me OxyContins,鈥 or the pain medicine, she said in the film.

She quickly discovered that heroin was much less expensive than pills.

鈥淗eroin became my best friend. Heroin became the love of my life,鈥 Melissa said. 鈥淚 put heroin before my family. I put heroin before my children, and I thought that I couldn鈥檛 do nothing in life anymore without heroin.鈥

Her love for the drug was boundless. She contracted Hepatitis-C from sharing needles with people she didn鈥檛 know. She would use toilet water to shoot up when she didn鈥檛 have money to buy bottled water.

Melissa would use rainwater on the side of the road, sucking it up in the needle and shooting the dope that way.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 care what it was going to do to me later on,鈥 she said. 鈥淛ust, I wanted it, the feeling of it, right then and there.鈥

Melissa said she was a prisoner who lived in crack houses with soiled mattresses. A woman overdosed in the bathtub.

鈥淎t one point, I had an abscess in my leg that was so bad that I had staph infection,鈥 Melissa continued. 鈥淢y leg was like four times its normal size. When the doctors cut my leg open to clean it out, I had maggots in my leg. They were eating the rot, the infection.鈥

Melissa survived despite her illness. Others in film were not so fortunate.

Acting DEA Administrator Chuck Rosenberg said, each year, more than 46,000 people die from a drug overdose.

鈥淭he message is powerful and we hope that it scares people,鈥 said Paul Abate, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI鈥檚 Washington field office.

WARNING: Graphic content. Viewer discretion is advised.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqdmWRExOkQ&feature=youtu.be

J.J. Green

JJ Green is 草莓传媒's National Security Correspondent. He reports daily on security, intelligence, foreign policy, terrorism and cyber developments, and provides regular on-air and online analysis. He is also the host of two podcasts: Target USA and Colors: A Dialogue on Race in America.

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