State lawmakers nationwide are responding to the deadliest overdose crisis in U.S. history by pushing harsher penalties for possessing fentanyl and other powerful lab-made opioids that are connected to about 70,000 deaths a year.
Imposing longer prison sentences for possessing smaller amounts of drugs represents a shift in states that in recent years have rolled back drug possession penalties. Proponents of tougher penalties say this crisis is different and that, in most places, the stiffer sentences are intended to punish drug dealers, not just users.
“There is no other drug — no other illicit drug — that has the same type of effects on our communities,” said Mark Jackson, the district attorney for Douglas County, Nevada, and president of the Nevada District Attorneys Association, which is pushing for stricter penalties for fentanyl-related crimes.
But the strategy is alarming recovery advocates who say focusing on the criminal angle of drugs has historically backfired, including when lawmakers elevated crack cocaine penalties in the 1980s.
“Every time we treat drugs as a law enforcement problem and push stricter laws, we find that we punish people in ways that destroy their lives and make it harder for them to recover later on,” said Adam Wandt, an assistant professor of public policy at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. He said people behind bars often continue getting drugs — often without receiving quality addiction treatment — then emerge to find it’s harder to get work.
Since 2020, drug overdoses are now linked to more than 100,000 deaths a year nationally, with about two-thirds of them fentanyl-related. That’s more than 10 times as many drug deaths as in 1988, at the height of the crack epidemic.
Fentanyl mostly arrives in the U.S. from Mexico and is mixed into supplies of other drugs, including cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and counterfeit oxycodone pills. Some users seek it out. Others don’t know they’re taking it.
Ingesting 2 milligrams of fentanyl can be fatal, meaning 1 gram — about the same as a paper clip — could contain 500 lethal doses.
That’s what’s driving some lawmakers to crack down with harsh penalties, along with adopting measures such as legalizing materials to test drug supplies for fentanyl and distributing naloxone, a drug that can reverse overdoses.
Before this year’s legislative sessions began, a dozen states had already adopted fentanyl possession measures, according to tracking by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
And in this year, in one legislative chamber of liberal Oregon and one chamber of conservative West Virginia, lawmakers have agreed upon tougher penalties. In her State of the State speech this March, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, a Republican, called on lawmakers to adopt a drug trafficking bill that includes tougher fentanyl sentences.
In Nevada, where Democrats control the Legislature, a bill backed by Democratic Attorney General Aaron Ford would give one to 20 years in prison for selling, possessing, manufacturing or transporting 4 grams or more of fentanyl into the state, depending on the amount. It’s a change for Ford, who has supported criminal justice reforms including a sweeping 2019 law that, among other provisions, raised the threshold for such penalties to 100 grams. It would also remove fentanyl from the state’s “Good Samaritan” law, which exempts people from criminal drug possession charges while reporting an overdose.
“What we’ve learned is that lowering the thresholds for all drugs was overinclusive,” Ford said.
Harm reduction advocates are pushing Ford and others to rethink their support, arguing the thresholds for longer penalties can sweep up low-level users — not just the dealers the law is aimed at — as well as some who may not even know they are taking fentanyl. They warn that the state’s crime labs test only for the presence of fentanyl, not the exact amount in a mixture of drugs. Thus, people with over 4 grams of drugs containing a few milligrams of fentanyl could be subject to trafficking penalties, they say.
Rosa Johnson runs a needle exchange where she meets people who could face consequences should the stricter fentanyl bill pass. For the dozens of people that show up each day, it is rare for them to cite fentanyl as their “drug of choice.” But it’s also rare that fentanyl test strips come back negative, with the drug being “laced in a lot of things,” Johnson said.
Other lawmakers introduced two bills to create penalties for fentanyl with lower thresholds, though much of the internal debate surrounds the Ford-backed bill. Meanwhile, Nevada’s Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo, a former sheriff, has vowed to introduce tougher legislation that would make possession of any amount of fentanyl the same felony threshold as fentanyl trafficking.
Both Republican-led chambers in South Carolina have passed fentanyl trafficking measures with bipartisan support, although lawmakers haven’t agreed on which version to send the governor. Senators also unanimously approved a bill allowing alleged drug dealers to be charged with homicide in overdose deaths.
House Minority Leader Todd Rutherford slammed colleagues for selling a “false bill of goods.” While Republican Rep. Doug Gilliam said he understood concerns about ambiguity, he said lawmakers had to send a “strong message” to drug dealers.
A Senate subcommittee heard emotional testimony from family members of people who died of a fentanyl overdose. Among them was Holly Alsobrooks, co-founder of an advocacy group that also supports more fentanyl test strips, opioid antidotes and rehabilitation centers. While Alsobrooks said there is no “perfect” solution, she said the fentanyl trafficking measures are the “best” answers she has heard.
“We are fully behind this bill,” she said. “And if people go to jail, they’re going to go to jail.”
Marc Burrows, who leads a Greenville-based harm reduction program that reports it has reversed 700 overdoses through the provision of opioid antidotes, said these bills could increase deaths by creating hesitancy among drug users to report overdoses.
“I just don’t know if a policy like this is the way to do it,” Burrows said.
(AP)
6 Responses
I’m okay with them ODing on it. The world’s overpopulated. It’s self-selective eugenics. The world will be a better place for it. If you wanted, you could even spin it as being compassionate with them.
Schmendrick’s comment is one the the most truly disgusting examples of rishus that I have ever seen. Fentanyl is a horrible magefah that causes sorrow to many families: Jewish and non-Jewish, frum and non-frum. How many families have lost their children to opioids? I know that multiple families in my shul have. Many young people (teenagers and young adults) fall into the trap. The only appropriate reaction from any of us is rachmonus on the addicts and their families.
@Schmendrick:
I am not going to address most of your (frankly ignorant) comment, however, the idea that the world is overpopulated is laughably wrong.
It is an old trope going back at least to the 1700s when the belief was that the world could not tolerate more than one billion people. As time has proven, this is utter nonsense with over eight times that population.
Not only are the dire predictions wrong, but a higher percentage of these people are living a vastly higher quality of life through it all.
Lower-class people in all developed nations and many developing nations are living a better life than middle-class people (and in some cases even nobility) back then.
dd, know that multiple families in your shul have lost their children to opioids? Really? In which shul do you daven? I never have heard of any frum Yid using fentanyl. Kneh bosem I’ve heard of, and I used to worry they might be putting fentanyl in the kneh bosem, which according to some DEA reports is a real issue (and not just paranoia caused by the kneh bosem). I don’t know what you mean by reshus. If you mean milchemes reshus, I prefer to call it a milchemes mitzvah לְמַעוֹטֵי נׇכְרִים דְּלָא לַיְתֵי עֲלַיְיהוּ cuz, you know, I hold like Rebbi Yehudah, but I guess you must hold like the rabbanan (Sotah 44b). Anyway, no matter the nafka minah of our machlokes, the fentanyl isn’t meant for Yiddin. That should be pshita. Not sure what the solution is if some Yiddin are stumbling over that. Maybe the solution is to educate them from a very young age that the world is a very dangerous place nowawadays cuz it appears we’re in the midst of a milchemah, so you ought to be careful what you ingest (or inject?). War is disgusting. Sorry, dd, but it is what it is. Anyway, I stand by my comments. Glad we could learn shtickle together.
Shmendrick just showed YWN what type of person he really is
He is happy that people are dying from fentanyl because the world is over but people shouldn’t take the vaccine because the government wants to kill people
If that was the case he should love the vaccine
Coffee addict, don’t insult me or distort what I’ve said. You know I think Yiddin should pass on everything harmful. That’s why I’ve made comments antivax and anbove against Yiddin taking drugs. With that said, responding to fakenews, the world can’t sustain its population now without shipping fertilizers half way around the world, and those reserves of fertilizer are being depleted. Also large scale farms require pesticides. We’re depleting quality farmland or ruining it. Also, fresh water is becoming scarcer and scarcer. Our energy sources, like fracking, cause a lot of environmental devastation. Anyway, doesn’t matter whether I think it’s overpopulated, people with much greater resources than I have think so, e.g., the Club of Rome, and they would like to see it reduced to a billion or less. So, whether you like it or not, there is a milchamah to reduce the population, and I won’t feel safe till there remains some billion, and if you’re smart you’ll stay out of harm’s way, which actually isn’t so difficult, and it shouldn’t bother you if others are targeted. That’s how it survive. Please, don’t insult me for trying to help Yiddin be prepped to survive. I bet you already fell for the vax or are a bot or a spook.