FBI’s attack on fentanyl is working to reduce overdose deaths (Opinion) ...Middle East

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After years of heartbreak and rising fatalities, Colorado has reached a long-awaited turning point in the fight against fentanyl. For the first time in more than a decade, we are seeing a meaningful decline in overdose deaths — not just in isolated communities, but across the state and the country. This progress is real. It’s hopeful. And it’s the direct result of coordinated efforts at every level of government.

But now is not the time to let up. The fentanyl threat hasn’t disappeared — it has evolved. And if we lose focus, the gains we’ve made could quickly slip away.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control’s National Center for Health Statistics shows that overdose deaths nationwide dropped by almost 27% from 2023 to 2024. In Colorado, fatalities declined by 18%, falling from 1,998 to 1,637. Most notably, fentanyl-related deaths dropped 35% percent — from 1,238 to 804. These are the most encouraging numbers we’ve seen since before the COVID-19 pandemic and might signal a long-overdue reversal of a devastating trend.

This progress is thanks to the tireless work of public health professionals, community advocates and law enforcement — especially here in Colorado — who have made it their mission to save lives and hold traffickers accountable.

At the federal level, law enforcement has made dismantling the fentanyl supply chain a top priority. In 2024, the DEA seized more than 60 million counterfeit pills and nearly 8,000 pounds of fentanyl powder nationwide — enough to deliver more than 380 million lethal doses. These seizures represent lives saved and underscore the scale of the crisis.

The urgency continues in 2025. In just the first four months of this year, more than 22 million fentanyl-laced pills and 3,100 pounds of powder were seized nationwide — clear evidence of the threat’s persistence and the relentless pace of interdiction work.

In Colorado, the FBI’s Denver Field Office is leading targeted enforcement efforts through specialized task forces that work closely with federal, state, local, and tribal partners. These teams are disrupting not only drug shipments but also the trafficking networks behind them.

In recent months, joint operations resulted in the arrest of 43 traffickers and the seizure of more than 1,000 pounds of methamphetamine and 45 pounds of fentanyl from Colorado streets. In one case worked with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, deputies recovered 50,000 fentanyl pills from a single vehicle.

These are not just statistics. They represent real threats removed from real neighborhoods. Every arrest and every seizure disrupts transnational criminal groups and reflects the strength of interagency collaboration.

But the FBI’s work goes beyond seizing drugs. We are also targeting the financial infrastructure that keeps these criminal organizations alive. By tracking illicit money flows and dismantling laundering networks, we’re cutting off the cartels’ ability to operate and grow.

Recent federal policy directives are strengthening our ability to act. The designation of certain cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations has expanded enforcement tools and improved intelligence sharing. These changes are allowing us to move faster, collaborate more effectively, and strike at the heart of trafficking operations with greater precision.

Still, law enforcement cannot do this alone. As we enter the summer months — when overdose rates often rise — we need communities, families and policymakers to stay engaged.

That means parents having honest conversations with their kids. It means community groups continuing prevention and outreach. And it means elected leaders supporting strong enforcement, treatment and recovery programs.

Colorado has shown what’s possible when we work together. The success of our FBI-led task forces — powered by local, state, tribal and federal partnerships — proves that intelligence-driven, unified action saves lives.

But the fentanyl threat remains. Traffickers adapt. So must we.

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This is a pivotal moment. We have momentum. Now, we must press forward — with urgency, unity, and unwavering commitment to protecting Colorado families.

The fight is not over. But together, we can keep making progress — and save even more lives.

Mark Michalek is the Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Denver Field Office. He is also a U.S. Air Force Academy graduate.

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