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fentanyl crisis

In the face of an alarming surge in overdose deaths, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) unveiled a bold strategy aimed at crippling the production of fentanyl and synthetic drugs by targeting their precursor materials.

This collaborative effort, spanning a host of federal agencies, will play a pivotal role in battling the relentless wave of the deadliest overdose crisis in U.S. history.

The fentanyl crisis

Under this ambitious plan, CBP will join forces with postal services, express consignment carriers, air carriers, and logistical companies to share critical information about suspicious goods, potential transit routes, and other data that can dismantle the supply chain of illicit synthetic drugs, particularly fentanyl. The targets include seemingly innocent legal items such as molds, presses for pill production, and essential chemicals.

Evolution of a drug trade

A disconcerting trend sees these legal goods increasingly infiltrating the United States via air cargo from Asia, landing at major airports, such as Los Angeles. Subsequently, they find their way into Mexico, where drug cartels manufacture fentanyl before smuggling it back into the United States for illegal distribution. CBP’s strategy hinges on disrupting every link in this supply chain through data-driven intelligence, marking a significant step forward in combating the overdose crisis.

Troy Miller, the acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, stood alongside U.S. Coast Guard officials and San Diego County sheriff’s deputies. He pointed out that nearly half of the agency’s fentanyl seizures occur in the San Diego sector.

The drug trade has evolved significantly since 2016 when fentanyl primarily entered the U.S. via mail, hidden in envelopes. Today, it arrives via ships and planes, bearing machinery, dyes, and other materials essential for fentanyl production, setting the stage for the ongoing overdose crisis.

This bold strategy to tackle the fentanyl crisis represents the latest endeavor by the Biden administration to combat the drug crisis. Earlier, the government announced indictments and sanctions against Chinese companies and executives, holding them responsible for importing chemicals used in the production of synthetic opioids like fentanyl.

The toll is staggering, with more than 100,000 deaths linked to drug overdoses annually since 2020, and approximately two-thirds of these fatalities are attributed to fentanyl. The unveiling of this comprehensive strategy offers a ray of hope in a dark, ongoing battle against the devastating impact of this deadly synthetic drug.

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