MONROE - A woman who overdosed on heroin in a Monroe apartment was fined last week in Green County Circuit Court for a conviction related to the incident.
Samantha Marie Sundlie, 25, Orfordville, pleaded no contest Sept. 8 to the misdemeanor charge of possessing drug paraphernalia and was fined $642.
The man who allegedly sold her the heroin, Brad Munz, 26, Monroe, faces felony charges of delivering heroin and bail jumping and misdemeanor charges of possessing marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
Munz's case his still pending. A status conference is scheduled Sept. 30. He's currently under a $5,000 cash bond, cosigned by his parents, with conditions that include no travel outside Green County except to Warren to help his parents remodel their home and to Madison for treatments at a methadone clinic.
Police were called on Feb. 12 to Munz's apartment in the 1400 block of 15th Avenue for a report of a drug overdose.
Sundlie was lying on the floor and was pale and cool to the touch, according to police reports. She was having difficulty breathing and was unresponsive.
Medics administered Narcan, a medication used to reverse opioid overdoses, and Sundlie "sat up and gasped for air."
Once recovered, Sundlie told police she'd had a toothache and self-medicated with two Vicodin pills and a shot of tequila. When the toothache pain persisted, she "caved in" to her boyfriend's suggestion to get heroin, despite being in recovery, and got a $20 bag from Munz.
She injected herself in his bathroom, according to police reports.
Samantha Marie Sundlie, 25, Orfordville, pleaded no contest Sept. 8 to the misdemeanor charge of possessing drug paraphernalia and was fined $642.
The man who allegedly sold her the heroin, Brad Munz, 26, Monroe, faces felony charges of delivering heroin and bail jumping and misdemeanor charges of possessing marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
Munz's case his still pending. A status conference is scheduled Sept. 30. He's currently under a $5,000 cash bond, cosigned by his parents, with conditions that include no travel outside Green County except to Warren to help his parents remodel their home and to Madison for treatments at a methadone clinic.
Police were called on Feb. 12 to Munz's apartment in the 1400 block of 15th Avenue for a report of a drug overdose.
Sundlie was lying on the floor and was pale and cool to the touch, according to police reports. She was having difficulty breathing and was unresponsive.
Medics administered Narcan, a medication used to reverse opioid overdoses, and Sundlie "sat up and gasped for air."
Once recovered, Sundlie told police she'd had a toothache and self-medicated with two Vicodin pills and a shot of tequila. When the toothache pain persisted, she "caved in" to her boyfriend's suggestion to get heroin, despite being in recovery, and got a $20 bag from Munz.
She injected herself in his bathroom, according to police reports.