Omar Al-Zaman

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Unemployed Tazewell miners like Doug Clark, who’d once made thirty-five dollars an hour, were now in legal trouble for ripping copper from an abandoned mining-equipment shop—to resell on the black market and fund his next OxyContin buy. Clark had gotten hooked after surgery to repair an injured neck and broken jaw; a rock had fallen on him inside a nearby Russell County mine, since closed.
Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America
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