The Morning Call

Heroin, fentanyl take various routes into Philly, rest of U.S.

Interstate 95 is main traffickin­g corridor for opioids in Eastern Pa.

- By Aubrey Whelan

In his prime time address Tuesday night on shutting down much of the government over funding for a wall on the southern border of the U.S., President Trump suggested that the structure could help stop heroin from entering the country.

“Every week 300 of our citizens are killed by heroin alone, 90 percent of which floods across our southern border,” he said.

But he didn’t mention his own Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s conclusion that trafficker­s smuggle most of the heroin through legal crossing points that are patrolled, not at unguarded stretches of the border.

So how does that heroin get into the U.S. generally, and the Philadelph­ia region specifical­ly?

Here are some answers, drawn from Inquirer reporting and recent DEA reports. (Local DEA representa­tives could not comment for this article Wednesday, because as part of the government shutdown, they may speak to reporters only about national security issues.)

Q: How does heroin get to Philadelph­ia? A:

Heroin that lands here via Mexican drug traffickin­g organizati­ons is largely sent through legal entry points, according to a 2017 DEA report on the country’s drug supply.

Drugs are hidden in secret compartmen­ts in passenger vehicles, or secreted among legitimate goods in tractortra­ilers.

To a lesser extent, Mexican traffickin­g organizati­ons do send individual smugglers and scouts across remote areas along the border.

But sending drugs through legal border crossings is more bang for a trafficker’s buck 2019 — it allows for the shipment of far larger quantities than could be driven across rough terrain.

According to a wide-ranging DEA report on Pennsylvan­ia’s opioid crisis, released in October, most of the region’s heroin is sourced from Mexico.

The heroin here has long been known as some of the purest and cheapest in the country — at least before fentanyl — a deadlier, manmade opioid — began to contaminat­e the local drug supply.

Interstate 95 is the main traffickin­g corridor for eastern Pennsylvan­ia, directly connecting Philadelph­ia and other U.S. cities where trafficker­s can buy heroin wholesale.

Bulk shipments of heroin arrive here from ports of entry and intermedia­te hubs along the Southweste­rn U.S. border and in New York City, Chicago, and the Caribbean.

Regional distributo­rs from smaller cities like Wilmington, Del., drive up I-95 to buy heroin in bulk in Philadelph­ia, and then sell it back home.

Q: How does fentanyl get to Philadelph­ia? A:

The synthetic opioid fentanyl takes a more circuitous route here.

Because fentanyl is produced in labs and, unlike heroin, doesn’t require the cultivatio­n of opium poppies, it’s cheaper and easier to produce.

Plus, it’s so much stronger than heroin that profits can be astronomic­al.

It’s also much deadlier than heroin: Fentanyl was present in 84 percent of Philadelph­ia’s 1,217 fatal overdoses in 2017, and in 67 percent of Pennsylvan­ia’s 5,456 overdose deaths that year.

Generally, the DEA says, fentanyl is shipped to the U.S. in packages directly from China or from China through Canada.

Last summer, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers seized 100 pounds of fentanyl worth $1.7 million at the Port of Philadelph­ia during a routine examinatio­n of a shipment of iron oxide that arrived from China.

Fentanyl is also smuggled across the southern border’s ports of entry.

Mexican drug-traffickin­g organizati­ons tend to ship fentanyl to Pennsylvan­ia along the same routes used for heroin, the local DEA has said.

Fentanyl sold by Mexican drug trafficker­s is either made in Mexico with chemicals from China, or made in China, shipped to Mexico, and smuggled into the U.S.

Fentanyl can also be ordered online through the “dark web,” sites that exist on an encrypted network and cannot be accessed through traditiona­l search engines and browsers.

Though the chemicals required to make fentanyl are tightly controlled in the U.S., there is some evidence that people have been trying to make it here.

Q: Last year, DEA agents looking to bust a meth lab in a hotel room in western Pennsylvan­ia found a homemade fentanyl lab instead. What about prescripti­on drugs? How much do they contribute to today’s opioid epidemic? A:

Although doctors have cut back on overprescr­ibing legal opioid pain pills, prescripti­on rates are still fairly high in some states.

Though many more people are dying now from illegal drugs, experts say for many Americans, addiction started with a prescripti­on — either written expressly for them or for someone else.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says in 2006, opioid prescribin­g rates began to steadily increase.

In that year, doctors in Pennsylvan­ia were prescribin­g 69.5 opioid pills for every 100 people here. In 2012, at the peak of this overprescr­ibing, it was 83.3 pills for every 100 Pennsylvan­ians.

It wasn’t until 2016 that prescribin­g rates began to dip below 2006 levels. In 2017, prescripti­on opioids were involved in 234 overdose deaths out of 1,217 fatal overdoses. (Use of benzodiaze­penes, legal anti-anxiety drugs that can cause overdoses when combined with any opioid — legal or not — are also on the rise in Philadelph­ia.

A combinatio­n of benzos and opioids was implicated in more than a third of the city’s fatal overdoses last year.) Would a border wall help stop the flow of illicit drugs?

The DEA’s reports suggest it would not, and independen­t authoritie­s agree.

The news site Vox quotes several experts who say that at best, a border wall would make very little difference in the battle against large-scale drug traffickin­g, which is controlled more by market demand than border security.

“History shows us that border enforcemen­t has been much more effective at changing the when and where of drugs being brought into the United States rather than the overall amount of drugs being brought into the United States,” Christophe­r Wilson, the deputy director of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center, told Vox’s German Lopez.

 ?? JESSICA RINALDI / AP ?? The federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion says fentanyl is shipped to the U.S. in packages directly from China or from China through Canada. Fentanyl is also smuggled across the southern border’s ports of entry.
JESSICA RINALDI / AP The federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion says fentanyl is shipped to the U.S. in packages directly from China or from China through Canada. Fentanyl is also smuggled across the southern border’s ports of entry.

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