The Columbus Dispatch

‘We are fighting merely for survival,’ prosecutor says of illegal drugs

- Your Turn Raymond A. Grogan Guest columnist

Think about the lives lost, the potential wasted, the kids left behind when 107,000 Americans are needlessly killed through drug overdoses.

Everyone can see we have a problem at our Southern border.

Drugs are pouring over into our communitie­s at alarming rates and while there are many who are quick to go on television and talk about how dire the situation is, it is communitie­s such as mine that must deal with it every day.

Recently, the United States Customs and Border Protection had over 234,000 encounters with individual­s at the southern border — 234,000 people. In one month. The month before that, it was over 222,000 encounters.

It is not just people coming across our border; the border is also a conduit for an overwhelmi­ng amount of illegal drugs.

A 2021 Issue Brief from the U.s.-china Economic and Security Review Commission found “(t)he Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels are the main entities responsibl­e for manufactur­ing precursor chemicals into finished fentanyl and smuggling it into the United States.”

The men and women who work for Customs and Border Protection are heroes who undoubtedl­y work hard, but the sheer number of encounters they have do not allow them the time, energy, or resources to adequately protect us from the influx of illegal drugs.

Recently, Mexican and U.S. authoritie­s found a tunnel from Tijuana to Otay Mesa, California that was used to smuggle drugs. The drugs recovered from the tunnel are estimated to have a value of $25 million.

It causes one to wonder, how many drugs were smuggled before the tunnel was discovered?

The federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion reported that last year it seized enough fentanyl to kill every American. Sadly, this statistic directly correlates to the more than 107,000 people who died from illegal drug overdoses last year — the highest number ever. Think about the lives lost, the potential wasted, the kids left behind when 107,000 Americans are needlessly killed through drug overdoses.

While there are many who talk about the problem at our Southern border in abstract terms, I can assure you that it has real consequenc­es for communitie­s such as mine, a community that is more than 1,000 miles away from the U.s.mexico border.

My community is relatively small. Marion County, Ohio is home to 66,500 residents.

We have a local police department and a county sheriff’s office. Those two agencies, along with my office, make up the MARMET Drug Task Force.

This Task Force has five full-time detectives and a supervisin­g detective. Since 2018, this unit has taken over 4,000 grams of fentanyl off our streets.

That is enough fentanyl to kill over 2 milion people. sed pills, or thousands of grams of other drugs that they have seized in that time.

In 2019, Marion County had 30 residents die from an illegal drug overdose. That number jumped 40% to 42 lives lost to a drug overdose in 2020. Last year, the number was 36. These are 108 mothers, fathers, brother, sisters, and children. They are now gone forever, leaving family members devastated and trying to pick up the pieces left behind.

We are doing all that we can from a local position to fight back.

We aggressive­ly prosecute drug trafficker­s for selling these drugs, and in particular, those who sell and supply the drugs which result in the fatal overdoses.

We have drug courts in municipal court, common pleas court and even in juvenile court.

We have more treatment providers than ever before. But unless and until the Biden administra­tion gets serious about shutting down the flow of illegal drugs on our southern border, we are fighting merely for survival, not for prevention.

The federal government is the only entity that can make lasting, impactful change to the drugs coming from the border. We need the help now.

This problem cannot wait any longer. My community, and thousands more like it across this country, are dealing with the devastatio­n of these deadly illegal drugs every day. We need help.

We need the Biden administra­tion to do its job and to do it now.

Raymond A. Grogan is the Marion County prosecutin­g attorney.

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