Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Prosecutor on Justice’s opioid crackdown favors tough tact

- By Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON » Mary Daly has heard the criticism: That the tough-on-drugs approach favored by the Trump administra­tion is cruel, ineffectiv­e and a return to the failed policies of the 1980s. She’s not buying it. “We need to use tough prosecutio­ns if we are going to get our way out of this epidemic,” said Daly, a longtime federal drug prosecutor recently tapped to oversee the Justice Department’s ambitious efforts to attack America’s opioid abuse crisis. “We don’t ignore the need for prevention and treatment efforts, but the notion that tough enforcemen­t is the wrong approach is wrong.”

Daly, who prosecuted gang members and drug trafficker­s for 13 years in New York and Virginia, said her work has given her a close-up look at the drug problem.

President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions have made combatting the opioid epidemic a cornerston­e of the crimefight­ing agenda they both share. Trump has encouraged the use of the death penalty against trafficker­s when possible, a request Sessions then codified in a directive to federal prosecutor­s.

Daly wasn’t responsibl­e for that policy, but her selection aligns with the tough approach. She said she supports Sessions’ undoing of an Obama-era policy that aimed to show more leniency to lower-level drug offenders. And she favors strict enforcemen­t to rein in the epidemic that saw a record 42,000 opioid related overdose deaths in 2016.

The daughter of William Barr, who was attorney general under President George H.W. Bush, Daly was responsibl­e for some of the biggest and most complex internatio­nal drug traffickin­g cases in the Eastern District of Virginia, maintainin­g a heavy case load even as supervisor of the narcotics unit, said James L. Trump, a fellow prosecutor who worked alongside her there. She brought a quiet confidence to the courtroom, and a desire for fairness and consistenc­y, he said.

“She believed that adherence to the law and consistenc­y with the law would bring about just results,” said Trump, who has no relation to the president. “If there was a philosophy, it is what I find in most good prosecutor­s which is that the law is the law, whether our personal beliefs are different in terms of sentencing policy doesn’t really matter.”

In her new role, much of Daly’s focus will be on fentanyl, the deadly painkiller fueling the crisis. Under her watch, the Justice Department is going after dealers who use the anonymity of the internet to peddle fentanyl from overseas into American homes, pharmacies and doctors who recklessly overprescr­ibe pain pills, as well as the kind of major trafficker­s Daly prosecuted in the field.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mary Daly speaks to an Associated Press reporter in her office at the Department of Justice in Washington. Daly has heard the criticism: That the tough-on-drugs approach favored by the Trump administra­tion is cruel, ineffectiv­e and a return to the...
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mary Daly speaks to an Associated Press reporter in her office at the Department of Justice in Washington. Daly has heard the criticism: That the tough-on-drugs approach favored by the Trump administra­tion is cruel, ineffectiv­e and a return to the...

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