Trump Should Hit Biden For Completely Ignoring The Fentanyl Problem

Biden’s first three years saw almost a quarter of a million fentanyl deaths, which he has largely ignored because it's too politically embarrassing.

Can decriminalization fix America’s drug crisis?



It’s no secret America has a drug problem. Last year, there were more than 100,000 overdose deaths in America, largely attributed to fentanyl. Over the past few decades, American cities have struggled to grapple with this crisis. Instead of enforcing existing drug laws and cracking down on crime, some have chosen a different path: decriminalization.

Author and podcast host Christina Dent recently joined "Relatable" with Allie Beth Stuckey to advocate for the decriminalization of drugs as a solution to America’s growing addiction crisis. Dent pushes a “health-centered approach” as opposed to a “criminal justice approach.” The former, according to Dent, addresses the root cause of addiction, while the latter could do more harm than good.

Dent’s opinion was largely formed through her experience with her adopted son’s biological mom, who was an addict. Had her son’s biological mother been imprisoned for her drug use, Dent’s son never would have had a relationship with her, and incarceration would have done nothing to help her addiction.

It’s true that throwing drug users in jail does little to help their addictions and could even harm them due to the availability of drugs in prisons. However, the ambiguous definition of “decriminalization” paired with the troubling results seen in American cities that have attempted such policies raises questions about the efficacy and safety of going this route.

Take Oregon, for example. In 2020, voters overwhelmingly passed a resolution that decriminalized possession of hard drugs. Last month, Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek (D) signed a bill that reversed this measure and re-criminalized possessing small amounts of hard drugs, making it a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail. The original measure failed largely due to botched implementation of mental health and treatment services, sparks in overdoses due to fentanyl, increased homelessness, and worsening public drug use. A recent report shows Oregon is one of the top ten most dangerous states in the country — it’s hard to imagine public drug use did not play a part in Oregon’s worsening crime.


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Oregon governor re-criminalizes drug possession, marking end of another fatal leftist experiment



Oregon's Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek ratified legislation Monday re-criminalizing the possession of small amounts of drugs, bringing a fatal leftist experiment to an end.

Narco state

In 2020, radicals in the Beaver State figured that the best way to tackle addiction and perceived "systems of oppression" would be to enable addicts to openly carry illicit drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamin without legal consequence.

This decriminalization initiative took on the form of Measure 110, which reclassified possession of a controlled substance in Schedule I-IV from a Class A misdemeanor to a Class E violation.

The Democratic Party of Oregon, Multnomah Democrats, several medical unions, the ACLU of Oregon, NAACP Portland, NARAL Pro-Choice Oregon, and various other leftist outfits championed the measure.

The Oregon Association Chiefs of Police, various recovery groups, the Oregon Catholic Conference, and the Washington County Republican Party were among those who understood the decriminalization scheme was a recipe for disaster, reported Ballotpedia.

Naomi Schaefer Riley, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, warned that "such measures lower the risk and the cost of doing business for drug dealers and increase the supply of these drugs on streets across the country. Drugs will be cheaper and easier to get for adults already suffering from untreated mental illness, poverty or abuse. And the effects will be felt most severely by children."

Washington County District Attorney Kevin Barton underscored, "This is a terrible idea. It's disconnected to what's best for Oregonians. It will lead to increased crime and increased drug use."

Measure 110 went to a vote in November 2020 and 58.5% of voters indicated they were on board.

Kassandra Frederique, the executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, touted the result as a "paradigm-shifting win and arguably the biggest blow to the war on drugs to date," adding, "Oregon showed the world that a more humane, compassionate approach is possible."

The law took effect in February 2021.

Fatal failure

It turns out normalizing the use of hard drugs was indeed "a terrible idea." After all, earlier this year, Gov. Kotek, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler, and Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson each declared a 90-day state of emergency to address the out-of-control overdoses in the state.

Newsweek reported that between 2020 and 2022, overdose deaths in Oregon skyrocketed by 75%. By way of comparison, overdose death increased by only 18% nationally during the same two-year stretch. Opioid overdoses in the Beaver State during this period increased by 101% and meth-involved overdoses increased by 112%.

Violent crime increased by 17% after Measure 110 passed, while public drug use and homeless camps full of junkies became ubiquitous.

Portland remains one of America's seedier cities, ranking 1 on Neighborhood Scout's crime index where 100 is safest.

To make matters worse, as drugs were freely flowing through the streets of Oregon and crime was on the rise, the state also saw one of the largest increases in homelessness in the nation. The Oregonian reported that between 2020 and 2022, the state saw an increase in its homeless population from 3,304 homeless persons to roughly 18,000.

The public quickly soured on the decriminalization scheme, with even radicals like Mayor Ted Wheeler of Portland seeking some return to sanity.

Correcting a 'huge mistake'

Kotek ratified House Bill 4002 on Monday, effectively reversing Measure 110.

Under the law, which had bipartisan support, a court can lock up an individual found in possession of illegal drugs for up to 180 days or sentence them to 18 months of probation. Jail sentences can be reduced "for any day the defendant is on release to a treatment program or previously served in-custody."

The law, which prevents courts from imposing fines or fees for a drug possession conviction, won't go into effect until Sept. 1.

The Statesman Journal reported that during testimony at the state legislature, the Oregon Public Defense Commission indicated it would have to hire 39 new full-time public defenders just to accommodate the glut of incoming suspects charged for drug offenses under the bill.

"We must acknowledge that Oregon's number of unrepresented persons will likely increase due to House Bill 4002," Kotek wrote in a letter to the speaker of the state House and the president of the state Senate.

While critical of Measure 110 and its fallout, Wheeler still appears unwilling to condemn the idea animating the decriminalization movement, telling the New York Times that "the state botched the implementation. ... To decriminalize the use of drugs before you actually had the treatment services in place was obviously a huge mistake."

"The truth is that addiction rates and overdose rates skyrocketed. I personally do not attribute all of that to the passage of Measure 110," added Wheeler. "It was very easy for the public to draw a line between the passage of Measure 110, the decriminalization of hard drugs, the increase in addiction and the increase in overdoses — and criminal activity associated with drugs."

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'It seems it is just flowing over the borders': Rick Harrison of 'Pawn Stars' says son Adam died due to fentanyl overdose



Rick Harrison of "Pawn Stars" fame has said that his son Adam Harrison died due to a fentanyl overdose.

"Yes, I can confirm Adam died from a fentanyl overdose," he said in a statement, according to Fox News Digital. "The fentanyl crisis in this country must be taken more seriously. It seems it is just flowing over the borders and nothing is being done about it. We must do better."

Adam Harrison was just 39 years old.

According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Sinaloa Cartel and Jalisco Cartel are behind the the majority of fentanyl flowing into the U.S.

"While the cartels' operations are based in Mexico, DEA has identified more than 50 additional countries where these criminal networks operate," a DEA press release states. The agency said that cartels buy chemicals from companies located in China, concoct the drug "in Mexico, and then traffic and distribute finished fentanyl widely throughout the United States."

"Today, fentanyl is the leading cause of death for Americans between the ages of 18 and 45. In calendar year 2023, DEA seized more than 77 million fentanyl pills and nearly 12,000 pounds of fentanyl powder. This is the most fentanyl seized by DEA in a single year. It amounts to more than 386 million deadly doses of fentanyl—enough to kill every American," the DEA noted in a press release.

DEA New Jersey Field Division Special Agent in Charge Cheryl Ortiz described the drug as "the greatest threat to our nation," according to the press release.

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Ohio woman allegedly lured men with sex, then fatally drugged, robbed them. Police searching for more 'serial killing' victims.



An Ohio woman is accused of carrying out the "serial killings" of at least four men in Columbus. The woman allegedly lured the men to hotels with the promise of sex. However, the woman instead would fatally drug the men before stealing their belongings, according to the attorney general.

Rebecca Auborn was charged on Sept. 11 with aggravated robbery, felonious assault, murder, corruption of another with drugs, trafficking in drugs, and the illegal manufacture of drugs.

On Wednesday, authorities announced new charges for Auborn. The 33-year-old from Columbus is now facing four counts of murder, four counts of involuntary manslaughter, five counts of aggravated robbery, five counts of felonious assault, five counts of corrupting another with drugs, one count of tampering with evidence, and four counts of trafficking in drugs — all felonies.

Investigators suspect Auborn to be involved with the overdose of four men and one who survived the encounter with the woman. The Central Ohio Human Trafficking Task Force received information that a woman was meeting men in northeast Columbus and then dosing the "johns" with drugs in order to steal their belongings.

Police believe Auborn lured a man to a hotel room with the promise of sex on Dec. 13, 2022. The man overdosed but survived.

Between January 2023 and June 2023, police said there were four men who suffered a fatal overdose of drugs while suspected of being with Auborn for sexual relations.

The Columbus Dispatch reported, "Court records from another case said Auborn admitted to detectives that she had mixed fentanyl in a man's crack pipe after meeting him for sex. In that case, Auborn told detectives she knew the man was overdosing, but took his vehicle and debit card, according to court records."

Investigators stressed that they believe there are more victims. Police are reinvestigating overdose deaths that happened near the other crime scenes from around the same timeline as the other deaths.

A statement from state Attorney General Dave Yost described the death as "serial killings."

"Don’t buy sex in Ohio – it ruins lives and could cost you yours," Yost said.

Auborn has been detained in the Franklin County jail. She is expected to appear in Franklin County Common Pleas Court for an arraignment on Friday.

Police are urging anyone with information related to the deadly overdose cases to contact the Columbus Division of Police homicide tip line at 614-645-2228.

‘Serial killings’: Columbus woman charged with deaths of men she met for sex www.youtube.com

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Hit Song ‘Rich Men North Of Richmond’ Gives A Glimpse Into The Lives Of Americans Left Behind

In 'Rich Men North Of Richmond,' singer-songwriter Oliver Anthony grieves for an America where people were propserous, healthy, and happy.

Teenage mother arrested for allegedly putting fentanyl in 9-month-old's bottle — a dose large enough to kill 10 adults



Florida police arrested a teenage mother last week for allegedly putting a fatal dose of fentanyl in her 9-month-old son's bottle.

Nassau County sheriff deputies responded to a house in northern Florida on June 26. A distressed 911 call reported that a 9-month-old inside the house was not breathing and had no pulse. A responding officer performed CPR on the infant, but the child was declared dead at a Jacksonville hospital.

According to Nassau County Sheriff Bill Leeper, the child's 17-year-old mother initially told police she didn't know what happened.

But her story changed in subsequent interviews. Finally, the mother confessed last Tuesday to drugging her young son, telling police that on the day of her son's death, she was tired and wanted her son to sleep. So she put what she claimed she believed was cocaine in her son's Micky Mouse baby bottle.

Tragically, the drug was not cocaine — but fentanyl.

"On July 10, we received information from the medical examiner's office that the child had 29 nanograms per milliliter of blood in his system, and the cause of death was ruled 'fentanyl overdose,'" Leeper explained at a press conference. "The medical examiner also stated that 3 nanograms per milliliter of blood would kill a normal person like me."

That amount of fentanyl, Leeper went on to say, was enough to kill about 10 adult humans.

"Who does that? What mother would do that? That's not normal. That is sick. It's beyond my imagination why a mother would do that to her child," he said. "No one should lose their life to this terrible, deadly drug — especially an innocent baby."

The mother — whose name was not released because of Marsy's Law — was charged with aggravated manslaughter and possession of a controlled substance.

Phillip Word, the child's 17-year-old father, told WJXT-TV that he remains in a state of disbelief that his son is dead and said he hopes the baby's mother receives harsher criminal charges.

9-month-old dies after 17-year-old Nassau County mother puts fentanyl in child’s bottle, sheriff... www.youtube.com

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California Dems Go Easy on Fentanyl Dealers as Overdose Deaths Spike

As San Francisco grapples with a spike in overdose deaths, California Democrats are waffling on efforts to crack down on drug dealers.

The post California Dems Go Easy on Fentanyl Dealers as Overdose Deaths Spike appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Rapper Coolio died from fentanyl overdose: Manager



Grammy-winning rapper Coolio, born Artis Leon Ivey Jr., died at the age of 59 in 2022. It was unclear at the time what had claimed his life. His manager revealed this week that Coolio, like tens of thousands of other Americans, was slain by a fentanyl overdose.

Coolio's manager, Jarez Posey, said that the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office disclosed to the rapper's family Thursday that Coolio had died on Sept. 28, 2022, of a fentanyl overdose, reported Reuters.

The coroner's report obtained by Page Six indicated that police found three bags of drugs and drug-related paraphernalia on or near the dead rapper's body.

Officials also collected "a baggy with a brown powdery substance, foil with burn residue, a straw/tube, saline solution, a spoon with residue," along with some cannabis products.

According to the autopsy report, Coolio also allegedly had heroin and methamphetamine in his system.

His death was ruled accidental, with cardiomyopathy, asthma, and phencyclidine use cited as contributing factors.

Fentanyl is the leading killer of adults ages 18-45.

The number of drug overdose deaths in the U.S. increased by 30% between 2019 and 2020, representing a five-fold increase since 1999. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, from 2019 to 2020, opioid-involved death rates increased by 38% and synthetic opioid-involved death rates went up by 56%.

In 2021, opioids killed an estimated 80,816 Americans.

Ten percent of the significant drop in U.S. life expectancy, now at its lowest point in over two decades, is attributable to such overdoses.

TheBlaze previously reported that, according a 2022 Congressional Joint Economic Committee report, the opioid crisis, after adjusting for inflation, cost the U.S. economy $1.47 trillion in 2020. That is a $487 billion increase over 2019 and a 37% increase from 2017.

The Drug Enforcement Administration announced in December that over "50.6 million fentanyl-laced, fake prescription pills and more than 10,000 pounds of fentanyl powder" had been seized in 2022. An untold amount of fentanyl nevertheless made its way onto the streets, as reflected by recent death statistics.

The Sinaloa and CJNG cartels mass-produce fentanyl at secret Mexican facilities with precursor chemicals from China. These drugs are then trafficked into the U.S. over the largely unsecured border.

The DEA indicated in 2020 that "Mexico and China are the primary source countries for fentanyl and fentanyl-related substances trafficked directly into the United States."

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