Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced yesterday that,
over the next 45 days, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) will surge
Special Agents, Diversion Investigators, and Intelligence Research Specialists
to focus on pharmacies and prescribers who are dispensing unusual or
disproportionate amounts of drugs. To intensify the fight against prescription
drug diversion, DEA will utilize data from approximately 80 million transaction
reports it collects every year from prescription drug manufacturers and
distributors. DEA will aggregate and analyze this data, which includes
distribution figures and inventory of prescription drugs, to identify patterns,
trends, and statistical outliers that can be developed into targeting packages.
“Our country is in the midst of a drug abuse crisis, enabled
and worsened by rampant drug trafficking and prescription drug diversion,” said
Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “This surge of resources by the Drug
Enforcement Administration will help us make more arrests, secure more
convictions, and reduce the number of diverted or unnecessary prescription
drugs causing addiction and overdose.”
The surge announced yesterday is the latest in a series of
efforts by the Department of Justice to turn the tide of the opioid epidemic
and reduce the inevitable violent crime that accompanies widespread drug
trafficking. In August, the Department announced a new data analytics program,
the Opioid Fraud and Abuse Detection Unit, which uses data to identify and
prosecute individuals who are contributing to the opioid epidemic. The
Department has also assigned experienced prosecutors to opioid hot spot districts
to focus solely on investigating and prosecuting opioid-related health care
fraud, and the DEA has reorganized its field divisions for the first time in
nearly 20 years to increase its effectiveness nationwide.
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