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Friday, December 20, 2024

Fentanyl Overdoses in the US Down For the First Year Since 2019

 "Socalj" for Borderland Beat

From a Newsweek Article

The DEA Administrator who has overseen the response to the United States' fentanyl crisis told Newsweek Wednesday that targeting the entire supply chain — from China to Mexican cartels to criminal networks in the U.S. — is the reason overdose deaths have been falling precipitously.


Anne Milgram, who was appointed to the office by President Joe Biden in 2021, spoke after the Drug Enforcement Administration announced that in 2023, 69% of all overdose deaths were linked to the lethal synthetic opioid.

Fentanyl was responsible for around 200 American deaths a day last year. The drug's cartel origins has been a focus for the federal government, which has had to work to unpick a complex, global network – including pill pressers, transporters, and money launderers — in an attempt to cut off the flow into the U.S.



Milgram's interview with Newsweek comes at the end of her tenure leading the agency. President-elect Trump's choice to replace her withdrew his candidacy, and another appointee is yet to be announced.

"President-Elect Trump has made brilliant decisions on who will serve in his second Administration at lightning pace. Remaining decisions will continue to be announced by him when they are made," Trump transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told Newsweek.

OD Investigations

Under Milgram's leadership, the DEA expanded its Operation OD Justice, set up originally in 2021 in California to thoroughly investigate overdose deaths and trace the source of the drug. Since then, over 500 drug poisonings and overdose-related death investigations have taken place.

"Some of those, we have been able to directly link back to Jalisco in Mexico, and others to part of the criminal networks that we're targeting," Milgram told Newsweek, referring to one of the two major cartels linked to fentanyl distribution. The other is Sinaloa.

"In the last three years we have arrested four of the seven leaders of Sinaloa, so we're also having an impact on the leadership and the infrastructure in Mexico," Milgram added.

Overdose Death Stats

Drug overdose deaths in the United States fell 17% between July 2023 and July 2024, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a new report released Wednesday.

Since 2021, over 100,000 people have died of overdoses each year in the United States. A record number of overdose deaths — over 108,000 — were recorded in 2022. The numbers dipped in 2023 and have continued to drop monthly throughout 2024.

While overdose deaths for 2024 have not been calculated yet, and will not be until after the end of the year, the CDC said that deaths fell 17% in a one-year period.

Global Networks

"We have now identified that these two networks, Sinaloa and Jalisco, are operating 65 countries around the world," she said. "Fentanyl remains a primarily North American problem within Canada, the U.S., and Mexico, but we have seen fentanyl seizures in other parts of the world. We've also seen the two cartels exporting methamphetamine in multiple countries."

The cartels are not the DEA's only targets, with China's role in precursor chemical production – the components used to make fentanyl – another vexing problem. Milgram said U.S. authorities had charged at least 20 Chinese companies and 20 Chinese nationals over their alleged roles in the drug's production. Diplomatic efforts have also led to the Chinese government take action on chemical production.

Drug traffickers are using cryptocurrency to launder the money associated with the fentanyl trade, which the DEA is now on to in its effort to map and target the entire criminal network.

"We have increased our capacity to trace the crypto and track the crypto globally, and we, again, have an entire counter-threat team, and those teams are agents, analysts, data scientists, targeters, chemical experts, money laundering experts," Milgram explained.

Source Newsweek

43 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Biden provided the syringes 💉 and the Cartels provided the supply

      Delete
    2. They were actually up but they didn't discriminate between an overdose that caused death and an overdose that was reversed because of Narcan.

      Delete
    3. Naloxone that's why

      Delete
  2. Wait until Trumpy Trump takes office

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Fentanyl started being trafficked heavy during trumps term so what is going to happen ?

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    2. You mean president Elon?

      Delete
    3. That’s koo foo

      Delete
    4. Yeah cartels will make twice as much

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    5. Trump had 4 years to fix things and he didn't do shit.

      Delete
    6. Trump is not going to do much this time just like last time. Remember when we said he was going to build a wall? lmfao.

      Delete
  3. 12:46, 1:20, 1:21
    No period kid, 😭 you have a lot of free time.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ‼️ 🚨 🚨 🚨 ‼️

      Delete
    2. That's Koo foo

      Delete
    3. 3:29
      Good morning Julia!

      Delete
    4. Why are you here exactly? You never provide anything of context. As a long time reader, these type of comments are annoying. I don't understand why they are allowed. Likely the reason real people involved stopped commenting as much unfortunately. Most people involved could not care less about their punctuation and writing skills. This isn't a writing class, it's a narco blog. Did I write that properly enough for you?

      Delete
  4. While I wish I could believe that law enforcement has had that level of impact, according to a few articles I've read on InsightCrime it may not be that simple. They suggest that other possible reasons for the decline in overdoses could be because fentanyl is so lethal that there are simply fewer drug users then there used to be, that regular users have developed an increase tolerance or that effective treatment has become more common. A recent article says that pills have become more common, and those tend to have a more fixed purity than other forms of the drug.

    ReplyDelete
  5. They're probably cutting it more.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bingo! The pressed pills are all junk. No dope at all in them. A friend told me! LOL 🤣!

      Delete
  6. Do you all think the government action slowed down the overdoses? Or, have a large percentage of the people who were going to die, already died? There has been a dramatic price decrease across the country for the pressed pills. I don’t think there is less fetty on the street. Seems to be more than ever. Narcan is more widely available than ever before also. Interested to hear what other people think/what their experiences are.

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  7. they claim the credit but ignore the other factors like users being more aware of the risk and carers being more prepared to intervene to prevent overdose deaths. they are only interested in justifying their own budget. if you wanna stop od deaths, provide a safe source of opiates to addicts, simple.

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  8. Let me guess Trump wants to take credit for that

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  9. They are down because the cartels saw Trump getting elected president. They are scared and sent fewer drugs up here. Wait until he takes office and deports all of the middle men. The middle men are the ones who order the drugs from Mexico and supply the local dealers. The deaths are really going to plummet. Nuff Said!!!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thank you to the cartel sicario that shot Barney Harris.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Where is James Brown?
      I heard he knew Barney Harris, after reading about him, I now know more.
      Teacher by day at a high school and robber by night of Cartel stash houses of CJNG in North Carolina. Barney felt he was doing a good deed and enriching himself, unfortunately his bulletproof vest did not save him.
      That opened up to authorities that there are low profile safehouses in the towns.

      Delete
  11. Always multiple factors but I think they lowered the formula in Sinaloa to reduce the number of deaths/overdoses
    Probably on Archi’s orders after the 2023 indictments

    Also outreach by US
    Awareness
    Natural cycle of drug trends

    ReplyDelete
  12. Thank you Chapitos for keeping killler dope of our streets in the US. PS, Sicario 006 es marica!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Ok so what now junkies will keep being junkies ?

    ReplyDelete
  14. I think this has to do with the availability of Narcan. Used to be only first responders carried it. Now it’s way more available for citizens. It’s a game changer

    ReplyDelete
  15. Since Chapitos put a banned on it 💯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're stupid. Seriously? So since the chapitos published a letter telling everyone to stop making and selling fentanyl it's going to happen? GTFOOH!

      Delete
  16. This is what I think happens. Osiel joins CJNG and will be menchos second hand man

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No period kid, mencho ESTA muerto vato loco. Concentrate on your periods.

      Delete
    2. Osiel is a dead MF! Get off the nutsack!

      Delete
  17. Ahem:
    The real reason overdoses are down is because of the coming tariffs and immigration crackdown.
    People are holding on to that fent.
    Rainy day type of shit.
    Ask around.
    It’s harder to get.
    It’s being kept in stash houses all over the US.
    It’s just not pushed as hard.
    It was going full bore for a minute.though wasn’t it?
    The good ol days.:
    2017-2023.
    Now that day is coming to an end with Trump.
    He’s already scaring dealers.
    You voted for him!

    ReplyDelete
  18. I miss the days where you could be out for a walk and pick up something colorful or shiny from the ground and die instantly from fentanyl poising….
    Ahhhh….
    Goodbye cruel world….
    What did I ever do to you?
    Hmmmmmmm… oh?
    Woooooooosh….
    ————————————————————————

    ReplyDelete
  19. Any news on Guanajuato it’s been deadly
    Video of sicarios killing 2 police officers

    https://youtu.be/wqup7mY6M_o

    ReplyDelete

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