Fentanyl is so easy to make it's a disaster

Mexican drug lords arrested
A blow to the powerful Sinaloa cartel
Fentanyl will still be on the menu
A straightforward process
The ingredients
Paid for in cryptocurrency
US' deadliest drug threat
A sweeping round up
Fentanyl as cartel's number one export
Fentanyl overdoses
Opioids as second most used drug
Fentanyl in disguise
A 2,300% increase over six years
A common practise
Unsuspecting users
Amateurish pill pressing
Government challenge
Sidestepping regulations
Sedating elephants
And then there were nitazenes
The impact of Taliban's poppy ban
Mexican drug lords arrested

It is hoped that the US Drug Enforcement Agency’s (DEA’s) recent arrest of two top-tier Mexican drug lords will curb the flood of the powerful synthetic opioid, fentanyl into the US.

A blow to the powerful Sinaloa cartel

Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, leader of Mexico’s bloodthirsty Sinaloa cartel and the son of jailed Sinaloa boss Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, Joaquin Guzman Lopez, were caught in Texas on July 25.

Fentanyl will still be on the menu

But Reuters has just completed an investigation into how easy it is to cook up the lethal drug, which is 50 times more powerful than heroin, with the ingredients arriving on the doorstep for a fraction of the cost of its street value.

A straightforward process

According to the news site, a Reuters journalist based in Mexico “bought everything needed to make $3 million worth of fentanyl. All it took was $3,600 and a web browser.”

The ingredients

The core ingredient of fentanyl are compounds known as piperidines which are combined with a small amount of common industrial chemicals, known as precursors, to produce a sea of deadly pills.

Paid for in cryptocurrency

A simple transaction between the journalist and a seller in China involving an avatar resulted in a shipment of the required ingredients arriving ready to cook. The goods were paid with bitcoin. The package stated that it contained an adaptor.

US' deadliest drug threat

Following the arrests of the two Sinaloa cartel chiefs on July 25, the BBC reported US Attorney General Merrick Garland declaring, “Fentanyl is the deadliest drug threat our country has ever faced.”

A sweeping round up

Garland added that “the Justice Department will not rest until every single cartel leader, member and associate responsible for poisoning our communities is held accountable.”

Fentanyl as cartel's number one export

American prosecutors say the Sinaloa cartel is the biggest supplier of drugs to the US, with fentanyl one of their leading exports. They also traffic wholesale amounts of heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and marijuana, according to the DEA.

Fentanyl overdoses

According to an estimate from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost 75,000 of the estimated 107,543 overdose deaths in the US in 2023 were caused by fentanyl.

Opioids as second most used drug

After cannabis, opioids are the most widely used drug with 60 million users worldwide, a report by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) states, followed by amphetamines (30 million). An estimated 228 million people use cannabis.

Fentanyl in disguise

Often users are not aware they are taking fentanyl as it can be mixed with other drugs. Recent reports by the DEA and a 2024 study supported by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) indicate that fentanyl-laced pills are becoming a major feature on the illicit drug market.

A 2,300% increase over six years

The NIH-supported study states that law enforcement seized more than 115m fentanyl pills in 2023, compared with about 49,000 in 2017, a 2,300% increase.

A common practise

The study’s author, Joseph Palamar, says that since 2010, it has become common for heroin to be laced with fentanyl as well as other drugs such as prescription benzodiazepines or opioids.

Unsuspecting users

“The most serious thing is you get these young people who think they’re going to take a Xanax or an Adderall or an Oxycontin and then they find out there’s fentanyl in it,” Palamar is quoted in The Guardian. “That kid could overdose and die.”

Amateurish pill pressing

According to the DEA, an average pill sold as oxycodone would be laced with around 2 mg of fentanyl, which would be potentially fatal, though this amount can sometimes be as much as 8.4 mg due to amateurish pill pressing.

Government challenge

Due to some of fentanyl’s ingredients being needed in other industrial activities, it is hard for governments to clamp down on the production of fentanyl, though many governments are now imposing strict regulations on some of the required precursors.

Sidestepping regulations

But, according to Reuters, fentanyl producers are nothing if not creative and can sidestep the regulations by using designer precursors that have a similar, but slightly different chemical structure.

Sedating elephants

Known as fentanyl analogs, these slightly different compounds can often be as deadly if not more so than actual fentanyl and produce a similar high. For instance, Carfentanil, developed to sedate elephants, is 100 times more potent than fentanyl, according to the DEA.

And then there were nitazenes

Meanwhile, the UNODC report has warned of another group of synthetic drugs, known as nitazenes, said to be 40 times stronger than fentanyl, and now being sold in the US and Europe.

The impact of Taliban's poppy ban

The report links the rise in these deadly drugs on the market to the ban on poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, following the Taliban takeover in 2022. Opium production fell the following year by 95%, from 6,200 tons produced in 2022 to 333 tons in 2023.

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