In the heart of Appalachia, law enforcement is often seen as being on the front line of the addiction crisis .
Bre Dolan, a 35-year-old resident of Hardy County, West Virginia, understands why. Throughout her childhood, when her dad had addiction and mental health crises, police officers were often the first ones to respond. Dolan calls them "good men and women" who "care about seeing their community recover."
But she's skeptical that they can mitigate the root causes of an addiction epidemic that has racked her home state for decades.
"Most of the busts that go down are addicts," she said — people who need treatment, not prison.
Dolan's father was one of them. And so was she.
Now 14 years into recovery, she's been surprised to see many local officials spending opioid settlement

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