Albuquerque Journal

DOJ aims to close Fentanyl loopholes

- THE WASHINGTON POST

In an effort to stem the increase in deaths from opioid overdoses, the Justice Department announced Thursday that anyone who possesses, imports, distribute­s or manufactur­es any fetanyl-related substance can be criminally prosecuted.

Justice officials said that overseas chemical manufactur­ers, aided by domestic distributo­rs, try to evade regulatory controls by using analogues, or structural variants, of fentanyl that are not directly listed under the controlled­substance law. That has forced prosecutor­s to overcome difficult evidentiar­y hurdles to convict trafficker­s under another law, Justice officials said.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that the department’s action to include all fetanyl-related substances on the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion “drug schedules” will give his prosecutor­s an important tool amid the nation’s opioid overdose epidemic.

“By scheduling all fentanyls, we empower our law enforcemen­t officers and prosecutor­s to take swift and necessary action against those spreading these deadly poisons,” Sessions said.

Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid, sometimes mixed into heroin or cocaine. Most illicit fentanyls come into the United States through the mail or express shipping systems or are imported across the southwest border, according to the Justice Department.

Every day, 55 Americans die of overdoses of synthetic opioids, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The overdose death rate from synthetic opioids approximat­ely doubled between 2015 and 2016, when more than 20,000 people died of overdose deaths, a Justice official said.

Last summer, the DEA warned police officers, firefighte­rs and other first responders who might come into contact with fentanyl to be careful about touching or inhaling any powdery white substance. In a case in Ohio, an officer passed out about an hour after brushing the substance off his shirt. He was revived with four doses of naloxone, which blocks the effects of opioids.

Thursday’s action is aimed at the creation of analogues that skirt the law. “DEA is seeing new fentanyl-related substances crop up at alarming rates,” a DEA official said. “This ... action gets us ahead of the chemists, ahead of the dealers, who would engage in this mad chemistry to avoid controlled substances.”

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