One young woman describes maggots feeding on an infection in her leg. Another talks of prostituting herself for heroin. Both wear prison uniforms as they recount, on camera, falling under the spell of opioids.
Jail, one FBI agent says during the 50-minute educational film, is the best most people like these young women can hope for.
"It's gonna end in a bad way," the agent says.
But now, a Chanhassen mother who lost her son to an accidental overdose is working with local FBI officials and a Hennepin County drug court judge to freshen up opioid abuse outreach for local, young audiences.
Though she encountered the worst possible outcome of addiction — her 20-year-old son died in their family home in 2016 — Colleen Ronnei wants to add a touch of hope to the messaging delivered to middle- and high-school audiences around the state.
"All of the messages he got were you're either going to die or you're going to end up in jail," Ronnei said of her son Luke. "Nobody was saying you can recover, this is a disease, there is help for you."
Alongside Judge Marta Chou, presiding judge of the Hennepin County Drug Court, and the FBI, Ronnei has participated in outreach events in front of more than 3,500 middle- and high-school students around the metro since last November as part of her "Change the Outcome" nonprofit initiative.
It didn't take Ronnei long to train her sights on the "Chasing the Dragon" film produced two years ago by the FBI and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, designed to be played in schools across the country. The film opens with remarks from James Comey and Chuck Rosenberg, former directors who have since left the two agencies.