N. Amityville Man Indicted for Allegedly Selling a Fentanyl-Tramadol Mixture

Said Drug Was Cocaine; One Dies of Overdose

A North Amityville man was indicted for the criminal sale of a controlled substance and other related charges, after allegedly selling a fentanyl-tramadol mixture to three Copiague men, causing a fatal overdose of a 32-year-old man, and the non-fatal overdose of the two others.  

On October 8, Omar Aitcheson, 31, allegedly sold a fentanyl-tramadol mixture to three Copiague men in Suffolk County. Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid drug that is 50 to 100 times stronger than heroin, and ingesting just two milligrams can be lethal. Tramadol is a  strong opioid pain medication used to treat moderate to severe pain with side effects that can slow or stop breathing. 

Believing that they had purchased cocaine, the three men snorted the substance that Aitcheson allegedly sold them, and all three immediately experienced symptoms of an opioid overdose. Two  of the three overdose victims were transported to Catholic Health Good Samaritan Hospital to be treated. One of those victims was released after receiving treatment, and the other, a 32-year-old  man, was pronounced dead upon his arrival at the hospital.  

Aitcheson continued to sell narcotics after he sold the fentanyl-tramadol mixture to the three victims. Last month, Aitcheson allegedly sold cocaine to undercover detectives on two separate dates. He was arrested on October 24, 2023.  

On November 6, Aitcheson was arraigned on the indictment by Acting County Court Judge Karen M. Wilutis for third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance, a Class B felony, and third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, a Class B  felony. Wilutis ordered Aitcheson held on $250,000 cash, $500,000 bond, or $2.5 million partially secured bond during the pendency of the case. Aitcheson is due back in court on December 12 and faces up to nine years in prison if convicted of the top count.

“This defendant allegedly sold a substance that he advertised as cocaine, but which was instead revealed to be a deadly cocktail of fentanyl and tramadol that resulted in the overdose death of one man and the non-fatal overdoses of two others,” said Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney. “While we tirelessly prosecute cases like this one, justice will not fully be done until our state drug and bail laws are fixed. It is unconscionable that my prosecutors cannot even ask for bail on fentanyl dealers  until after a death results, when it is already too late.”