With a stark warning, the Drug Enforcement Administration raised new alarms about the nation’s worsening drug crisis driven by powerful synthetic opioids and stimulants. The agency’s 2024 National Drug Threat Assessment, released today, reveals how Mexican cartels have supercharged drug production and distribution through chemical drug manufacturing and digital dealing.
“The drug poisoning crisis is the deadliest the U.S. has ever faced,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. “At its heart are the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels peddling fentanyl, meth, and other synthetic drugs with calculated treachery.”
Key Takeaways from the DEA’s 2024 Threat Assessment:
- Overdose deaths topped 107,000 in 2022, with synthetic opioids like fentanyl driving 70% of fatalities
- DEA seized nearly 30,000 lbs of fentanyl powder in 2023, almost double the prior year
- 79 million fentanyl pills were seized, triple the 2021 amount
- 30% of the fentanyl powder contained the animal sedative xylazine
- Nearly all U.S. methamphetamine now comes from Mexican cartel labs
The threat of synthetic opioids like fentanyl has reached cataclysmic levels. A potentially lethal dose of fentanyl is just 2 milligrams, but DEA lab testing found counterfeit pills containing up to 9 milligrams.
Moreover, traffickers are increasingly lacing fentanyl with compounds like nitazenes and xylazine to enhance potency and effects.
The Chinese Connection
Mexican cartels have built a vertically integrated supply chain with operatives in China supplying precursor chemicals. They’ve also partnered with Chinese money laundering networks to move illicit cash and utilize cryptocurrency.
“These groups use technology masterfully,” said Milgram. “Social media and encrypted apps let them advertise, collect payments, and arrange deliveries without meeting customers directly.”
Digital Drug Dealing
This new era of digital drug dealing has brought the opioid epidemic from the streets into American homes and smartphones. The DEA traced cartel drug operations to nearly 50 countries worldwide.
While synthetic opioids drove most overdose deaths, methamphetamine and other stimulants accounted for around 30% of fatalities in 2022. Seizure data confirms Mexican cartels have completely displaced domestic meth production with their industrial-level labs cranking out purer, more potent methamphetamine.
The synthetic drug crisis originated from the cartels’ shift away from plant-based drugs like cocaine and heroin. Fentanyl and meth are cheaper and easier to mass produce in clandestine labs, with more potent effects.
Latest Law Enforcement Tactics
Law enforcement strategies and prevention tactics are evolving, but are ultimately struggling to keep pace with the cartels’ advanced drug manufacturing and online proliferation methods.
“Addressing this crisis requires a unified campaign to limit supply from Mexico while intervening through drug education and addiction services,” said Jim McGill, founder of the anti-drug coalition FamiliesRise. “Synthetic opioids have turbocharged a public health emergency.”
Overview
The DEA’s comprehensive assessment serves as a wake-up call for policymakers and stakeholders across public safety, healthcare, and education sectors to coordinate response efforts.
While accidental overdoses from contaminated street drugs remain the primary danger, recreational use of synthetic opioids and meth has also increased among young demographics. This has contributed to a rising death toll impacting families from all socioeconomic backgrounds nationwide.
What’s Next?
In the coming months, the DEA says it will intensify efforts to incapacitate cartel leadership and money laundering operations overseas. At the same time, pressures will mount on digital platforms and fintech companies to disrupt their facilitation of drug sales and payments.
Experts emphasize no single solution exists, and a multi-pronged approach targeting supply and demand is imperative. The clock is ticking as synthetic drugs continue overwhelming communities.
For the latest information and resources related to the synthetic drug crisis, visit www.dea.gov.
Sources: THX News & U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.