Whistleblower Alleges DEA Allowed Fentanyl Shipments to Reach NM Communities
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Whistleblower Alleges DEA Allowed Fentanyl Shipments to Reach NM Communities
As the United States continues to battle the fentanyl epidemic, new allegations are raising questions about how federal law enforcement handled major drug investigations. An Associated Press report claims DEA agents in New Mexico monitored large shipments of fentanyl without immediately seizing them as they worked to build cases against trafficking organizations.
The allegations have sparked debate over whether the strategy protected the public or exposed communities to greater danger. While the DEA says its actions followed Justice Department guidance, a veteran DEA agent who filed a whistleblower complaint believes the agency took an unacceptable risk.
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From AP News:
“We poisoned our community to make cases,” DEA Special Agent David Howell told AP in a series of interviews in New Mexico. “Through our own willful blindness, we get to say, ‘We don’t really know what happened to the drugs.’ But we 100% got people killed.”The DEA has long contended it would not be plausible to seize every shipment of every drug. But the strategy of allowing staggering amounts of counterfeit painkillers to hit the streets shocked several veteran agents who spoke with AP.
Ridding the streets of illicit fentanyl, manufactured mostly in Mexican labs, became the DEA’s top priority over the past decade as overdose deaths surged. At the same time, its lethality — a few milligrams can kill the average adult — upended time-tested tactics that had been used to combat drugs like cocaine and heroin. Those methods have included allowing drug transactions to be completed so agents might follow the narcotics through the supply chain. Fentanyl, however, is so dangerous that the Justice Department developed guidelines for agents in such circumstances, encouraging them to seize the opioid whenever “practicable.”
Albuquerque, which has a neighborhood so besieged by drugs it’s known as “War Zone,” and other regions in New Mexico remain at the epicenter of the fentanyl epidemic. While overdose deaths nationwide fell 14% last year, government data show New Mexico tallied a 21% spike.
According to the AP, investigators allowed some drug shipments to continue so they could identify higher-level traffickers. Former U.S. Attorney Alex Uballez defended the approach. He said prosecutors sometimes must focus limited resources on dismantling entire criminal organizations instead of stopping every individual drug transaction.
The DEA also defended its actions. Agency spokeswoman Amanda Wozniak said investigators acted lawfully and followed Department of Justice policies. She disputed claims that agents knowingly allowed fentanyl to flood communities. Instead, she said the investigations relied on court-authorized surveillance and intelligence gathering to target major trafficking networks.
The controversy has also drawn the attention of whistleblower advocates. Howell alleges agents watched shipments totaling hundreds of thousands, and eventually millions, of suspected fentanyl pills move through New Mexico before making arrests. His complaint has renewed questions about whether investigative tactics used against other illegal drugs should apply to fentanyl, given its extreme potency and the danger even a small amount poses to the public.
For us, this story highlights the importance of both justice and the protection of human life. Government has a responsibility to punish wrongdoing and protect the communities it serves. As our nation continues to confront the fentanyl crisis, let us pray for wisdom for law enforcement, compassion for families devastated by addiction, and effective efforts to stop deadly drugs from crossing our borders.
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(Excerpt from AP News. Photo Credit: Rūdolfs Klintsons/Pexels)
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