WASHINGTON, D.C, May 9, 2023โThe Drug Enforcement Administration is proud to join โSong for Charlieโ and many of our valued law enforcement, public health, and non-profit partners in recognizing National Fentanyl Awareness Day. Today represents an important opportunity to remember the victims of fentanyl poisoning and educate people in our communities about the deadly threat that fentanyl poses to the national security, health, and safety of the American people.
One year ago, on the first National Fentanyl Awareness Day, DEA opened the Faces of Fentanyl exhibit at DEA Headquartersโa wall in DEAโs West Building that displays the photos of those who lost their lives to fentanyl poisoning. The memorial started with 100 photos; over the past year, Americans from across the country have sent DEA more than 5,000 photos. It reflects the reality that fentanyl is killing Americans from all walks of life, in every state and community in this country. The youngest person on the wall is Forever 17-months old. The oldest is Forever 70 years old. The Faces of Fentanyl exhibit has become a safe and compassionate space for grieving families impacted by fentanyl to visit when in the Washington, D.C., area.
โFentanyl is the greatest threat to Americans today. It kills more Americans between the ages of 18 to 45 than terrorism, than car accidents, than cancer, than COVID. It kills nearly 200 Americans every day. And the number of children under 14 dying from fentanyl poisoning has increased at an alarming rate,โ said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. โThe two drug cartels responsible for bringing fentanyl into the United Statesโthe Sinaloa and Jalisco cartelsโare intentionally driving addiction by selling fake pills and hiding fentanyl in other drugs, and they are reaching our kids through using social media platforms. I encourage you to use this day to talk to your families about the dangers of fentanyl and have an important conversation with your kids about who they are communicating with on social media.โ
DEA urges the public to be vigilant about fentanyl and the deadly threat it poses:
- Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is approximately 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. Just two milligramsโthe equivalent of a few grains of saltโcan kill a person.
- Fentanyl comes in two forms: pills and powder. The Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels are hiding fentanyl in fake pills that look like oxycodone, Xanax, and Percocet. The cartels are also mixing fentanyl powder in with cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine. This is why many of the people poisoned by fentanyl had no idea they were even taking it.
- The cartels and their members and associates are using social media applicationsโincluding Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchatโand encrypted platformsโincluding WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, Wire, and Wickrโto sell pills and powders that are advertised as something else but actually have fentanyl inside.
DEA has identified the two drug cartels responsible for the influx of fentanyl into this countryโthe Sinaloa and Jalisco cartelsโand its top operational priority is to defeat these cartels. In April 2023, DEA and our federal partnersย announcedย the indictment of 28 members and associates of the Sinaloa Cartel operating in Mexico, China, and Central America, including the leaders of the cartel known as the โChapitos.โ
In May 2023, DEA and law enforcement partnersย announcedย the results of a year-long national operation, โOperation Last Mile,โ which included the arrests of 3,337 operatives, associates, and distributors affiliated with the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels responsible for the last mile of fentanyl and methamphetamine distribution on our streets and on social media.
To get more facts about fentanyl, visit One Pill Can Kill.
Related Articles:
- Fentanyl awareness event on May 23 at Mukilteo City Hall
- Sheriff Fortney discusses the fentanyl crisis with journalist Sam Quinones
- 8 arrests, methamphetamine, and fentanyl confiscated in Operation Clean Sweep
- Sheriff says, โFentanyl crisis is realโ at public safety forum
- A motherโs cry for help to the rising dangers of fentanyl
SOURCE: DEA Recognizes National Fentanyl Awareness Day
Author: Lynnwood Times Staff


