A Vermont state trooper is recovering Saturday after he collapsed following a traffic stop in Addison County and was revived by multiple doses of Narcan.

At around 11:25 p.m. Friday, Sgt. Brett Flansburg of the New Haven Barracks stopped a vehicle for a traffic violation on Leicester Whiting Road in the town of Leicester.

While speaking with the driver, Sgt. Flansburg observed the passenger swallow an item.

The passenger, later identified as Taylor C. Woodward, 25, of Brandon, admitted the item was a baggie of cocaine.

During a subsequent search of the passenger and the vehicle, Sgt. Flansburg located and collected as evidence a small quantity of heroin in a baggie, an empty plastic baggie, and a syringe.

Woodward was taken into custody by other troopers on the scene for processing on suspicion of possessing heroin.

While transporting the evidence to the New Haven Barracks, Sgt. Flansburg began to feel ill and collapsed in the parking lot.

Fellow troopers found him unresponsive and rapidly administered two doses of the opiate overdose reversal drug Narcan.

The sergeant received a third dose of Narcan while being rushed to the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington, and began to show signs of improvement.

At the hospital, Sgt. Flansburg received additional medical treatment and later was released.

As a precaution, Woodward was brought separately to UVMMC to be checked out and was determined to require no medical care.

He was cited to appear May 6 in Vermont Superior Court, Criminal Division, in Middlebury to answer a misdemeanor charge of possession of heroin.

Col. Matthew T. Birmingham, director of the Vermont State Police, instructed VSP’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Narcotics Investigation Unit to conduct a full investigation of this incident.

Testing is underway to determine the substance to which Sgt. Flansburg was exposed.

The investigation is being led by Maj. Dan Trudeau, commander of VSP’s Criminal Division.

Being a state trooper is a dangerous and demanding job for all the reasons you’d expect: apprehending criminals, encountering volatile individuals, rushing toward emergencies rather than away. And now there is a new threat that we’re seeing up close: the risk of exposure to powerful drugs that can kill in even tiny amounts. This is so troubling and disconcerting, and it places members of law enforcement at unnecessary risk of possibly losing their lives.

We are incredibly lucky and extremely thankful that Sgt. Flansburg is alive and recovering today. Were it not for the immediate availability of Narcan and the quick actions of his fellow troopers and medical personnel, we might be speaking today about the death of a trooper in the line of duty. I’m angry at how close we came, and relieved that the situation was no worse than it was.

– Vermont State Police Director Colonel Matthew Birmingham