The Star Malaysia

Illegal opioids enter US through mail service gaps

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WASHINGTON: Illegal shipments of the powerful and addictive opioid fentanyl are pouring into the United States by mail from China and the US Postal Service (USPS) must step up the use of high-tech detection methods to fight the problem, said a congressio­nal report.

A year-long probe by a Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs investigat­ions subcommitt­ee revealed on Wednesday that there was easy access for buyers in the United States to purchase fentanyl, often in relatively large quantities, through the Internet.

The drugs are mailed by “labs” in China to individual­s who consume them or to middlemen who dilute them for resale.

Investigat­ors refused to divulge the names of the labs.

According to the report, the US Postal Service has failed to widely deploy a system to capture advanced electronic data (AED) about packages destined for American ports, which would help identify suspicious mail to be turned over to US Customs and Border Protection agents.

The US Postal Service said in a statement that it was “working aggressive­ly with law enforcemen­t and key trading partners to stem the flow of illegal drugs entering the United States”.

USPS is “prioritisi­ng obtaining AED from the largest volume foreign posts, which collective­ly account for over 90% of inbound volumes”, the statement said.

Asked about the probe, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing she was unaware of the specifics, but added that prevention of drug pro- duction, possession and sale was a “bright spot” in China-US relations.

Staff of the Permanent Investigat­ions Subcommitt­ee said they focused on six “very responsive” providers in China, out of hundreds of pages of websites offering fentanyl for sale.

The result was the identifica­tion of 500 online transactio­ns involving fentanyl, mainly in powder form, with a street value of about US$766mil (RM2.9bil).

US fatalities linked to opioids including fentanyl have been rising dramatical­ly and totalled more than 42,000 in 2016, according to government data.

Online sales from China tracked by the Senate investigat­ors were linked to seven confirmed synthetic opioid-related deaths in the United States, they said.

The investigat­ion was overseen by Republican Senator Rob Portman of Ohio, the subcommitt­ee chairman, and Senator Tom Carper of Delaware, the panel’s senior Democrat.

Investigat­ors said the Chinese sellers were eager to ship the fenta- nyl using Express Mail Service, which operates worldwide through each country’s postal operations, including the US Postal Service.

Surcharges were applied, the investigat­ors said, for customers demanding shipment through private delivery services such as Fed Ex, DHL and United Parcel Service because of the greater likelihood that the goods would be seized.

The Senate investigat­ion concluded that the US Postal Service received advanced electronic data on 36% of all internatio­nal packages, meaning about 318 million parcels last year were not monitored.

“We now know the depth to which drug trafficker­s exploit our mail system to ship fentanyl and other synthetic drugs into the United States,” Portman said in a statement.

The Senate panel scheduled a hearing for yesterday to question postal, border protection, State Department and other officials.

The report recommende­d tighter monitoring of internatio­nal shipments, increased inspection­s and other steps.

We now know the depth to which drug trafficker­s exploit our mail system to ship fentanyl and other synthetic drugs into the United States. Rob Portman

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