The Drug Enforcement Administration will establish the Omaha
Field Division – its 23rd division office in the United States – on July 8,
2018. The division will include Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and
South Dakota.
"In January, DEA reorganized its field divisions for
the first time in nearly 20 years. Today, just five months later, we are adding
another new field division," said Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
"That’s because we are facing a drug threat today the likes of which we
have never seen before—but we are rising to the challenge. The Omaha Division
will help us address the methamphetamine and opioid threat in Nebraska, Iowa,
Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. The people of these states can rest
assured that, in the face of an unprecedented crisis, we are taking steps to be
more effective and put the traffickers and crooked doctors where they
belong—behind bars."
“This action converts the existing Omaha District Office
into a division in an effort to enhance DEA enforcement efforts within the
Great Plain states region and unify drug trafficking investigations under a
single Special Agent in Charge,” said DEA Acting Administrator Robert W.
Patterson.
“DEA anticipates that this change will produce more
effective investigations on methamphetamine, heroin, fentanyl and prescription
opioid trafficking, all of which have a significant impact on the region,” said
DEA Omaha’s Special Agent in Charge Matthew R. Barden.
The division will also better align DEA with the U.S.
Attorneys’ Offices districts in those areas, similar to current ATF and FBI
offices, and also to the Midwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA)
Program.
The Omaha Division will be led by Special Agent in Charge
Matthew R. Barden, who comes from the St. Louis Division where he served as
Associate Special Agent in Charge.
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