Fentanyl murders reach deep into the US

 Betsy McCaughey:

Think you live too far from the Mexican border to be hurt by the chaos there?

Bloomfield is a picturesque village in central Connecticut, 3,500 miles from the Mexican border. But illegal drugs flowing across that border nearly killed a 16-year-old student at Bloomfield High School two weeks ago. He tried marijuana, not knowing it was laced with fentanyl. Police rushed to the school nurse's office and administered two doses of Narcan just in time to save him.

Responding to the surge in teen overdoses, Connecticut's Gov. Ned Lamont is asking, "How did this happen? How is there more fentanyl on the streets than ever before?" Look south, Governor.

Hidalgo County, Texas, Sheriff J.E. Guerra, who operates on the frontlines of the border war, explained that he's not worried drugs will impact his community. "The drugs go further north," he said.

Drug thugs cross the border disguised as needy migrants or even unaccompanied minors. Once across, they're provided bus and airplane tickets to destinations across the U.S. In some cases, charities -- largely taxpayer-funded -- pay for the tickets, and hand the border crossers cellphones and other items as they start their journeys north.

Other times, "Biden Air" flies migrants stealthily at night into places like Westchester County airport, close to the Connecticut border.

Once far north of the border, drug thugs are invading middle schools and high schools and killing our teens.

Last week's hearing before the Senate Finance Committee documented the soaring death rates among teens, especially Black teens. A 13-year-old student at the Sports and Medical Science Academy in Hartford, Connecticut, collapsed in the school gymnasium last month and died from a fentanyl overdose. Police found 40 bags of fentanyl in two classrooms, and another 100 bags in the boy's bedroom.

Bags of fentanyl in a public school classroom should evoke the same alarm as a school shooting or a bomb scare because that quantity could kill as many innocent students.

Not all young overdose victims are addicts. Fentanyl is 80 to 100 times stronger than morphine. When teens experiment with fentanyl-laced drugs, they're not just risking addiction; they're risking death on the first try. No second chance. Fentanyl kills so fast that by the time first responders arrive, more often than not, there's no pulse.

Many teen victims "probably don't have a substance use disorder, they're experimenting, making a bad choice, and they end up dead," explains Roneet Lev, an emergency room physician in San Diego.
...

Texas no longer classifies fentanyl deaths as "overdoses."  They now consider them a homicide. The Chicom fentanyl is turned into innocent-looking pills by the Mexican drug cartel and exported into the US by taking advantage of Biden's open borders policy.  The President is literally aiding and abetting the cartel agenda.

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