G.N. man sentenced to prison for role in drug overdose fatalities

Robert Pelaez
Great Neck resident Justin Lum was sentenced to prison for his role in drug-related overdose deaths, according to the District Attorney's office of Queens County. (Photo courtesy of Pixabay)

A Great Neck man was sentenced to up to six years in prison after pleading guilty to criminally negligent homicide by providing drugs that resulted in the overdose deaths of two people.

Justin Lum, 30, of Forest Row in Great Neck was charged with distributing cocaine, alprazolam (or Xanax), heroin, and in one case, fentanyl, to a man and woman, in the spring of 2017 and 2018, respectively in October 2019. In November 2020, Lum plead guilty to the charges and was sentenced to up to six years in prison by a Queens County judge.

Lum was the first alleged drug dealer to be charged in Queens County with a homicide related to overdose deaths, and the first one to be held responsible for them.

“The defendant provided drugs to these two victims despite knowing both had nearly died before of drug overdoses,” Queens County District Attorney Melinda Katz said. “This is the first time in the borough of Queens an admitted drug dealer has been held criminally responsible for the deaths of people who died after taking the poison he supplied to them.”

According to charges, Lum supplied heroin to his girlfriend, Patricia Collado, 28, of Brooklyn in April 2017.

After allegedly snorting lines of heroin from a cell phone at the movies, Collado passed out in a parked vehicle, where first responders transported her to a nearby hospital for further treatment, Queens prosecutors said in a release.

The next day, after being discharged from the hospital, Collado and Lum allegedly snorted more heroin at his grandfather’s home in Flushing, which resulted in Collado immediately going into cardiac arrest.

Lum did not call for medical assistance but attempted to “stabilize her,” according to the District Attorney’s Office.

After foaming at the mouth for an hour, Lum awoke the next morning, to find his girlfriend bubbling out the mouth, and called 911, and administered CPR per the medical dispatcher’s instructions, officials said.

“Overdose deaths have far outpaced homicides in the last few years,” Ryan said. “These are individuals who have become addicted to opioids and when heroin is laced with fentanyl there is an added risk since the synthetic opioid can be more than 50 times more potent than heroin.”

According to the indictment, less than a year later in March of 2018, Lum allegedly supplied heroin to Bayside resident Calvin Brown.

After consuming drugs that were allegedly provided by Lum, the 24-year-old Brown immediately had a medical emergency. Lum called 911 and administered CPR until first responders arrived and taken to a nearby hospital for treatment, officials said.

After being discharged almost a week later, Brown returned to Lum’s home, allegedly receiving more heroin, just three days after he was released from the hospital, according to the officials.

The next day, Brown’s mother found her son slumped on a desk in his bedroom, dead. An autopsy later revealed that the cause of death as a result of the combined efforts of heroin, Xanax, diazepam, and phenobarbital.

According to the release, an investigation was started after Collado overdosed during which an unnamed source recorded conversations between Lum and another individual.

On April 9, 2018, Lum was overheard telling the person whose conversation was recorded while conducting a drug sale, “You’d be technically my third body. I woke up next to my girlfriend, like OD’d,” officials said in a 2019 release.

Lum allegedly told the individual he was safe due to the “Good Samaritan law. I can’t get in trouble.”

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