Overdose deaths in 2017 from the drugs fentanyl, cocaine, and heroin rank highest in the Eastern United States, while higher rates of drug overdose deaths involving methamphetamine were prevalent in the Western part of the nation.
In the year of study, 70,237 drug overdose deaths were recorded in the United States. Fentanyl was involved in 39 percent of the deaths, followed by heroin, 23 percent, cocaine, 21 percent, and methamphetamine 13 percent, rounding out the top four drugs involved in overdoses across the nation.
The Center said that age-adjusted rates of drug overdose deaths involving fentanyl were higher in regions east of the Mississippi River. The rates for overdose deaths involved methamphetamine were “higher in the West.”
China And Fentanyl
China has been identified as the largest and primary source of illicit fentanyl and fentanyl analogs entering the United States, according to government commissions (pdf), law enforcement, and testimony (pdf) from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.The three defendants—Deyao Chen, Guichun Chen, and Liangtu Pan—allegedly ran websites located in China to sell the fentanyl. Five individuals from Illinois, Ohio, Georgia, and Tennessee later overdosed and died as a result of the defendants’ distribution of the drug.
The charges, experts told The Epoch Times, are the latest sign that the Chinese Communist Party is using the trafficking and production of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, as part of an organized strategy and form of drug warfare.
Jeff Nyquist, an author and researcher of Chinese and Russian strategy, said corruption is the “overriding element” governing why Beijing is engaging in drug warfare. He said that fentanyl trafficking ultimately leads to the infiltration of the United States.
“Poisoning people with drugs is not the No. 1 reason, according to communist sources. They do it because it causes a lot of money to be generated—illegal money which then can be used to bribe,” he said in a phone call.
U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain, who announced the charges, said in a statement: