WASHINGTON – The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration this
week placed all illicit fentanyl analogues not already regulated by the
Controlled Substances Act into Schedule I—the category for substances with no
currently accepted medical use—for two years, with the possibility of a
one-year extension. This action is expected to reduce these substances’ flow
into the country and slow the alarming increase in overdose deaths linked to
synthetic opioids.
“DEA is committed to using all of its tools to aggressively
fight and address the opioid crisis and growing fentanyl problem plaguing the
United States,” said DEA Acting Administrator Robert W. Patterson. “By
proactively scheduling the whole class of illicit fentanyl substances
simultaneously, federal agents and prosecutors can take swift and necessary
action against those bringing this poison into our communities.”
A fentanyl analogue is a substance intended for human
consumption that is substantially similar in its chemical makeup and effects to
fentanyls already listed in Schedule I. Fentanyl is often mixed with heroin and
other substances (such as cocaine and methamphetamine) or used in counterfeit
pharmaceutical prescription drugs. As a consequence, users who buy these
substances on the illicit market are often unaware of the specific substance
they are actually consuming and the associated risk.
Anyone who possesses, imports, distributes, or manufactures
any illicit fentanyl analogue will be subject to criminal prosecution in the
same manner as for fentanyl and other controlled substances. This will make it
easier for federal prosecutors and agents to prosecute traffickers of all forms
of fentanyl-related substances.
The Federal Register notice is available
here:https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2018/02/06/2018-02319/schedules-of-controlled-substances-temporary-placement-of-fentanyl-related-substances-in-schedule-i
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