Here’s Why Pence’s Air Force Two Trip to New Hampshire Was Cancelled

Vice President Mike Pence’s trip was cancelled because he likely would’ve come face-to-face with an alleged interstate drug dealer.
Here’s Why Pence’s Air Force Two Trip to New Hampshire Was Cancelled
Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the Donald J. Trump for President Latino Coalition Rollout at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Miami Airport & Convention Center in Miami, Fla., on June 25, 2019. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
The Daily Caller News Foundation
7/23/2019
Updated:
1/25/2023
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The White House abruptly cancelled a trip Vice President Mike Pence was scheduled to take because he likely would’ve come face-to-face with an alleged interstate drug dealer, Politico reported Monday, citing law enforcement officials.
One of the people Pence was likely to have shaken hands with at a July 3 New Hampshire event on opioid addiction was under federal investigation for moving $100,000 of fentanyl from Massachusetts to New Hampshire, the report notes. The reason for the cancellation was clouded in mystery, with President Donald Trump contributing to some of the drama.

Jeff Hatch, who agreed to plead guilty Friday and spend four years in prison, works for an opioid addiction treatment center in southern New Hampshire that the vice president was set to visit. Hatch, a former New York Giants football player, has publicly discussed his own challenges with drug and alcohol addiction.

Vice President Mike Pence waves from Air Force Two as he arrives in Huntsville to chair the fifth National Space Council meeting held at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala., on March 26, 2019. (Eric Schultz/AP Photo)
Vice President Mike Pence waves from Air Force Two as he arrives in Huntsville to chair the fifth National Space Council meeting held at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala., on March 26, 2019. (Eric Schultz/AP Photo)

The event was billed as “a roundtable discussion with former patients and alumni at the Granite Recovery Center headquarters,” which would include comments from Pence “on the opioid crisis and illegal drug flow in New Hampshire.” The vice president’s office declined to comment on the controversy, according to Politico.

Hatch was caught in 2017 with 1,500 grams of fentanyl, according to federal court documents released Friday.

Federal, state and local authorities began an investigation in early 2019 into drugs flowing into Manchester, New Hampshire. More than 500 people a year are dying in the Granite State for the last several years and the crisis does not appear to be abating.

Pence boarded a helicopter July 3 and headed for Joint Base Andrews outside Washington, D.C. He was scheduled to take off around 10:15 a.m. ET and touch down at a nearby airport in Manchester, where he would then travel to meet former patients and make remarks on opioids. But Air Force Two never departed, according to The Associated Press.
Trump appeared to predict what would happen.”You’ll know in about two weeks,” he told reporters at a July 5 event. “There was a very interesting problem that they had in New Hampshire.”
By Chris White 
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