Broad
& Liberty ran my piece today on the DEA and the enduring
and emerging threat of drug.
You
can read the piece via the below link or the below text:
Paul Davis: The DEA on the enduring and emerging threat of drugs (broadandliberty.com)
While discussing the drug epidemic in Philadelphia and across the nation, a retired Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) special agent spoke to me of the damage illegal drugs do to drug users, as well as to their families.
“I
remind others all the time that the hapless drug users we see stumbling along
Kensington and Allegheny and elsewhere in the city are people,” the retired DEA
agent said.
“The
drug user you see was probably a good person before the drugs took their body
and soul. The drug users have families who are devastated by their drug
addiction and horrible existence on the street.”
The
retired DEA agent blames Mexican drug cartels and the street gangs who profit
from the misery they inflict on drug addicts, families, neighborhoods and local
businesses. He also pointed a finger at Communist China, who provides the
chemicals to cartels for the making of the deadly drug fentanyl.
The
former drug agent suggested that I read the DEA’s January 2024 “State and
Territory Report On Enduring and Emerging Threat.”
The
report is a stark notice to how drugs are harming Philadelphia and the
nation.
“Fentanyl
remains the primary driver behind the ongoing epidemic of overdose deaths in
the United States,” the report stated. “The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) reports 72,027 drug poisoning deaths from fentanyl in 2022.
Moreover, the same provisional data shows synthetic opioids were involved in
approximately 68 percent of drug poisoning deaths.”
The
report noted that the incidents of fentanyl misuse and drug poisonings, and law
enforcement seizures of fentanyl, have increased steadily since at least 2013
and reached record levels in 2022.
“DEA,
along with state, local, and federal law enforcement partners, continues to
seize record quantities of fentanyl each year. The Sinaloa Cartel and Jalisco
New Generation Cartel (CJNG) continue to produce fentanyl in both powder form
and pressed into fake pills.”
According
to the report. fentanyl is increasingly being mixed with other illicit drugs,
such as methamphetamine, heroin, and cocaine and methamphetamine. Deaths from
psychostimulants (primarily methamphetamine) have steadily increased for the
past twelve years, and have sharply increased in the past five, which is likely
due to widespread availability of highly pure and potent methamphetamine from
Mexico.
“In
2022, the CDC reported 33,190 people died due to poisoning involving
psychostimulants with abuse potential, an increase of 32 percent from 2021.
Xylazine, a potent animal tranquilizer, has worsened the fentanyl threat by
posing yet another health challenge.
“Xylazine
is not an opioid, so naloxone/Narcan does not reverse its effects. Xylazine is
not a controlled substance under the U.S. Controlled Substances Act (CSA).
Xylazine is primarily added to fentanyl and other opioids to enhance the
effects. Xylazine, also known as “tranq”, is an analgesic and muscle relaxant
for veterinary use. Xylazine has harmful physical effects in the respiratory
and circulatory systems, as well as muscle and soft tissue injuries that can
turn necrotic or result in amputations. Xylazine has been encountered in
combination with fentanyl but has also been detected in mixtures containing
cocaine and heroin.”
The
report states that deaths from psychostimulants (primarily methamphetamine)
have steadily increased for the past twelve years, and have sharply increased
in the past five, which is likely due to widespread availability of highly pure
and potent methamphetamine from Mexico.
“The
DEA has seized xylazine and fentanyl mixtures in 48 of 50 States, Puerto Rico,
and the District of Columbia. Nitazenes (2-benzylbenzimidazoles) are an
emerging synthetic opioid group that can be more potent than fentanyl and poses
an additional opioid threat to the United States,” the report informs us.
“Similar to previously identified synthetic opioids, nitazenes have appeared on
the illicit market with minor chemical modifications while retaining their
pharmacological profile. Etonitazene, isotonitazene, clonitazene, and several
additional nitazene analogues are Schedule I substances under the U.S. CSA.
Nitazenes are increasingly being identified in combination with fentanyl,
heroin, and cocaine in lab submissions.”
The
retired drug agent said the report is sobering. He suggests that what is needed
to combat the drug epidemic is a full-frontal attack on the drug suppliers in
Mexico and on the street drug gangs in America.
“The
open Southern border also needs to be closed. The cartels are assisting illegal
immigrants cross the border and in addition to charging a harsh fee for doing
so, they are using some of them as “mules.” The mules are carrying the deadly
drugs across the border, and they end up in Philadelphia and other cities,” the
former DEA agent said. “The cartels are also smuggling in large quantities of
drugs via other methods. The Southern border needs to be closed.”
I
agree.
City,
state and federal law enforcement need to increase their efforts in shutting
down the drug dealing street gangs. And prosecutors and judges ought to slam
the drug dealers hard. The DEA and other federal law enforcement agencies ought
to be empowered to increase their war on the cartels in Mexico and
America.
Florida
Governor Ron DeSantis suggested using American special operation forces to hit
the cartels in Mexico during his presidential campaign, and former President
Donald Trump has also pondered the use of U.S. special operators in
Mexico.
A
Tom Clancy-like scenario of special operators hitting the cartels on their own
ground would disrupt the cartels and will make them fear America.
In
my view, the cartels are as serious a threat to America as Islamic radical
terrorists. They should be dealt with in the same way we countered the
terrorists
worldwide.
Closing
the border will stop the easy flow of drugs into America. The cartels are
clever, incentivized by money, so they will inevitably find other ways to
smuggle in drugs, but closing the border will decrease the amount of deadly
drugs now entering the country.
Having
performed security work for the U.S. Navy and the Defense Department for more
than 37 years, I know that proper security needs several rings. In addition to
a solid border wall, we need additional security measures, such as concertina
wire, (like Texas is laying out), electronic sensors, and an increase in Border
Patrol special agents and service dogs who defend the border.
Paul Davis, a Philadelphia writer and frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty, also contributes to Counterterrorism magazine and writes the “On Crime” column for the Washington Times. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.
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