Continuing to follow President Trump’s strong leadership on
combatting the deadly opioid crisis, Attorney General Sessions today announced
new resources and stepped up efforts to address the drug and opioid crisis.
Joined by Acting DEA Administrator Robert Patterson,
Attorney General Sessions announced the following efforts during a press
conference at the Department of Justice: over $12 million in grant funding to
assist law enforcement in combating illegal manufacturing and distribution of
methamphetamine, heroin, and prescription opioids; the establishment of a new
DEA Field Division in Louisville, Kentucky, which will include Kentucky,
Tennessee, and West Virginia, a move meant to better align DEA enforcement
efforts within the Appalachian mountain region; and a directive to all U.S.
Attorneys to designate an Opioid Coordinator to work closely with prosecutors,
and with other federal, state, tribal, and local law enforcement to coordinate
and optimize federal opioid prosecutions in every district.
“Today we are facing the worst drug crisis in American
history, with one American dying of a drug overdose every nine minutes,” said
Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “That’s
why, under President Trump’s strong leadership, the Department of Justice has
been taking action to make our drug law enforcement efforts more effective.
Today we announce three new initiatives to do just that. First, we will invest $12 million in funding
for our state and local law enforcement partners to take heroin and
methamphetamine off of our streets. Second, we will restructure DEA's Field
Divisions for the first time in nearly 20 years. Third, we will require all of
our federal prosecutors' offices to designate an Opioid Coordinator who will
customize our anti-opioid strategy in every district in America. These steps
will make our law enforcement efforts smarter and more effective—and ultimately
they will save American lives."
“DEA continually looks for ways to improve operations and
interagency cooperation and more efficiently leverage resources,” said Acting
DEA Administrator Robert W. Patterson. “By creating a new division in the
region, this restructuring places DEA in lockstep with our partners in the area
to do just that. This change will produce more effective investigations on
heroin, fentanyl, and prescription opioid trafficking, all of which have a
significant impact on the region.”
COPS Anti-Heroin Task Force Grants and Anti-Meth Program
The Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) Office is
awarding a total of $7.19 million in FY 2017 funding through the Anti-Heroin
Task Force Program (AHTF). AHTF provides
two years of funding directly to law enforcement agencies in states with high
per capita levels of primary treatment admissions for heroin and other opioids.
This funding will support the location or investigation of illicit activities
related to the distribution of heroin or the unlawful distribution of
prescription opioids.
The COPS Office will also award a total of $5.03 million in
FY 2017 funding through the COPS Anti-Methamphetamine Program (CAMP). The state agencies receiving funding today
have demonstrated numerous seizures of precursor chemicals, finished
methamphetamine, laboratories, and laboratory dump seizures. State agencies
will be awarded two years of funding through CAMP to support the investigation
of illicit activities related to the manufacture and distribution of
methamphetamine.
The complete list of Anti-Heroin Task Force Program (AHTF)
award recipients, including funding amounts, can be found here.
The complete list of COPS Anti-Methamphetamine Program
(CAMP) award recipients, including funding amounts, can be found here.
Establishment of DEA Louisville Field Division
The DEA will establish the Louisville Field Division – its
22nd division office in the United States – on Jan. 1, 2018. It will include Kentucky, Tennessee, and West
Virginia. This action converts the
existing Louisville District Office into a field division in an effort to
enhance DEA enforcement efforts within the Appalachian mountain region and
unify drug trafficking investigations under a single Special Agent in
Charge. DEA anticipates that this change
will produce more effective investigations on heroin, fentanyl and prescription
opioid trafficking, all of which have a significant impact on the region. The division will also better align DEA with
the U.S. Attorney’s Office districts in those areas, similar to current ATF and
FBI offices, and also to the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas
(HIDTA) Program.
The Louisville Division will be led by Special Agent in
Charge D. Christopher Evans, who comes from the Detroit Field Division where he
served as Associate Special Agent in Charge.
Designation of Opioid Coordinators
Every U.S. Attorney will designate an Opioid Coordinator by
the close of business on Dec. 15, 2017. Each USAO Opioid Coordinator will be
responsible for facilitating intake of cases involving prescription opioids,
heroin, and fentanyl; convening a task
force of federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement to identify opioid
cases for federal prosecution, facilitate interdiction efforts, and tailor
their district’s response to the needs of the community it serves; providing
legal advice and training to AUSAs regarding the prosecution of opioid
offenses; maintaining statistics on the opioid prosecutions in the district; and developing and continually
evaluating the effectiveness of the office’s strategy to combat the opioid
epidemic.
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