WASHINGTON, DC – The United States Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) today issued a nationwide alert about the dangers of
fentanyl and fentanyl analogues/compounds. Fentanyl is commonly laced in
heroin, causing significant problems across the country, particularly as heroin
abuse has increased. This alert was issued through the multi-agency El Paso
Intelligence Center (EPIC) to all U.S. law enforcement.
“Drug incidents and overdoses related to fentanyl are
occurring at an alarming rate throughout the United States and represent a
significant threat to public health and safety,” said DEA Administrator Michele
M. Leonhart. “Often laced in heroin, fentanyl and fentanyl analogues produced
in illicit clandestine labs are up to 100 times more powerful than morphine and
30-50 times more powerful than heroin.
Fentanyl is extremely dangerous to law enforcement and anyone else who
may come into contact with it. DEA will continue to address this threat by
directly attacking the drug trafficking networks producing and importing these
deadly drugs. We have lost too many
Americans to drug overdoses and we strongly encourage parents, caregivers,
teachers, local law enforcement and mentors to firmly and passionately educate
others about the dangers of drug abuse, and to seek immediate help and
treatment for those addicted to drugs.”
In the last two years, DEA has seen a significant resurgence
in fentanyl-related seizures. According to the National Forensic Laboratory
Information System (NFLIS), state and local labs reported 3,344 fentanyl
submissions in 2014, up from 942 in 2013.
In addition, DEA has identified 15 other fentanyl-related compounds.
Fentanyl is a Schedule II narcotic used as an analgesic and
anesthetic. It is the most potent opioid available for use in medical treatment
– 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and 30 to 50 times more potent than
heroin. Fentanyl is potentially lethal, even at very low levels. Ingestion of
small doses as small as 0.25 mg can be fatal. Its euphoric effects are
indistinguishable from morphine or heroin.
DEA has also issued warnings to law enforcement as fentanyl
can be absorbed through the skin and accidental inhalation of airborne powder
can also occur. DEA is concerned about law enforcement coming in contact with
fentanyl on the streets during the course of enforcement, such as a buy-walk,
or buy-bust operation.
Fentanyl cases in 2014 have been significant, particularly
in the northeast and in California, including one 12 kilogram seizure. The
fentanyl from these seizures originated from Mexican drug trafficking
organizations.
Globally, fentanyl abuse has increased the past two years in
Russia, Ukraine, Sweden and Denmark. Mexican authorities have seizure fentanyl
labs there, and intelligence has indicated that the precursor chemicals came
from companies in Mexico, Germany, Japan, and China.
Historically, this is not the first time fentanyl has posed
such a threat to public health and safety. Between 2005 and 2007, over 1,000
U.S. deaths were attributed to fentanyl – many of which occurred in Chicago,
Detroit, and Philadelphia. The source of that fentanyl was traced to a single
lab in Mexico. When that lab was identified and dismantled, the surge ended.
The current outbreak involves not just fentanyl, but also
fentanyl analogues. The current outbreak
is wider geographically and involves a wide array of individuals including new
and experiences abusers.
Some recent examples of the fentanyl surge across the United
States:
- New Hampshire
State Laboratory recently reported four fentanyl overdose deaths within a
two-month period.
- New Jersey saw
a huge spike in fentanyl deaths in 2014, reporting as many as 80 in the first
six months of the fiscal year.
- Rhode Island
and Pennsylvania have also seen huge increases since 2013. In a 15-month
period, about 200 deaths were reported in Pennsylvania related to fentanyl.
- In the St.
Louis area, based on information provided by medical examiners over a 10-year
period, fentanyl was the only drug attributed as a primary death factor in 44
percent of overdose cases.
- In June 2014,
DEA New York dismantled a heroin and fentanyl network and arrested the two
heads of the organization. These individuals were linked to at least three
overdose deaths from heroin and fentanyl they sold.
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