The police on front lines of the nation's battle against deadly heroin are changing tactics and even redefining their roles in some communities.
In a suburban Cincinnati township and a northwest Ohio county, police in special teams try to intervene with users soon after overdose recovery. They want to steer them into treatment while near-death experiences are fresh, before they relapse.
A program that offers treatment-seeking addicts an amnesty is spreading to other states from a northern Massachusetts community's police department.
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine recently spotlighted unconventional approaches at a conference in his hard-hit state. He says police can't arrest their way out of the problem.
Some criminal justice veterans applaud less hard-line approaches, but ask where they were for drug scourges hitting black communities hardest.