Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fentanyl’s ‘trail of death’ widens, officials say

L.A. County becomes major hub for opioid

- By Salvador Hernandez

LOS ANGELES — In the past two months, agents with Homeland Security Investigat­ions have seized as much fentanyl as they did in all of 2019, federal officials said, warning that the amount of the drug hitting the streets is increasing every year with deadly consequenc­es.

Last year, there were 71,000 fentanyl-related deaths in the United States, including 1,600 in Los Angeles County, U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada of the Central District of California said at a Monday news conference in L.A.

“Fentanyl has painted a trail of death across the country, across our district and across our community,” Estrada said. “The crisis today is unpreceden­ted.”

The dangers are especially heightened in L.A. County, which has turned into a major distributi­on hub for fentanyl as Mexican drug cartels have flooded the streets with cheaply manufactur­ed counterfei­t pills, often disguised to look like prescripti­on painkiller­s such as oxycodone.

On Monday, officials with the Department of Justice, the FBI, the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service raised alarms about the continued growth of fentanyl.

In many cases, officials said, the victims of fentanyl overdoses are unaware that the drugs they are taking contain fentanyl, which is considered significan­tly stronger than heroin and morphine and can be lethal at far smaller doses.

“The widespread death and suffering is being driven by drug cartels who care far more about profits than people’s lives,” Estrada said. “These drug-traffickin­g organizati­ons continue finding ways of getting large shipments of fentanyl into the country.”

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, drug use among teens ages 14 to 18 remained steady from 2010 to 2020, but a report from the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n found teen fentanyl deaths more than doubled from 2019 to 680 deaths in 2020.

Last year, that number increased to 884 deaths. Fentanyl was the cause of more than 77 percent of drug deaths among teens last year.

During the pandemic, drug dealers and distributo­rs moved to social media and the dark web to sell illicit drugs, said Bill Bodner, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion in Los Angeles. The result has been that younger victims have been ensnared in drug use and suffered overdoses by using drugs that they didn’t know contained fentanyl.

“Nightclubs, bars, social gatherings — these places were shut down (during the pandemic), so what did drug distributo­rs do?” Bodner said. “They went to social media.”

Federal officials believe most of the fentanyl in the U.S. is being smuggled in, mostly by the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels, which manufactur­e fentanyl pills for about 13 cents each in Mexico, Bodner said.

In July, officials seized one shipment of 1 million counterfei­t pills made with fentanyl, Estrada said.

But law enforcemen­t officials said they’ve also found more instances of the drugs being manufactur­ed inside the U.S.

On Friday, a federal grand jury indicted Christophe­r Hampton, accusing the 36-year-old of operating drug labs in Southern California­n that used high-speed presses to make fentanyl and methamphet­amine pills.

The drugs were sold on the darknet, an online world often accessible only through private, anonymizin­g browsers and used for illegal transactio­ns. There, federal officials allege, Hampton operated as “Narco710,” selling nearly $2 million of narcotics.

“This case illustrate­s how some trafficker­s have created all-encompassi­ng networks to sell counterfei­t pills,” Estrada said.

On Monday, federal officials emphasized that they have used multiple tactics to curb the spread of fentanyl, including the 4-year-old Overdose Justice Task Force, which launches investigat­ions into fentanyl poisonings and targets dealers for possible prosecutio­n.

Since the task force was created, the U.S. Department of Justice has charged 51 defendants linked to overdoses.

But federal officials also said a public campaign educating children will be essential to curb the threat of fentanyl-related overdoses.

“Every parent and guardian must educate themselves and their children of all ages about poisonous fentanyl-laced drugs being sold on social media applicatio­ns and via the darknet,” said Don Always, assistant director in charge of the FBI in Los Angeles.

 ?? Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion ?? Fentanyl pills and powder come in bright colors, shapes and sizes. The victims of fentanyl overdoses are often unaware the drugs they are taking contain fentanyl.
Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion Fentanyl pills and powder come in bright colors, shapes and sizes. The victims of fentanyl overdoses are often unaware the drugs they are taking contain fentanyl.

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