Trump signs bill to toughen fentanyl-related crimes


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Summary

HALT Fentanyl Act

President Donald Trump signed the HALT Fentanyl Act designed to address the opioid crisis.

Public health impact

Fentanyl levels in the United States have resulted in 450,000 deaths over the past decade.

Research provisions

The HALT Fentanyl Act includes provisions for researchers, acknowledging that obtaining approval to work with Schedule I drugs can be challenging.


Full story

President Donald Trump signed the Halt All Lethal Trafficking of Fentanyl Act, or HALT Fentanyl Act, on Wednesday, July 16. That legislation is designed to help curb the ongoing opioid epidemic, fueled in part by fentanyl.

HALT Fentanyl Act

The president held a ceremony at the White House with lawmakers and people who lost family members to fentanyl overdoses.

Among the many things this legislation does, it categorizes fentanyl and all related substances, including synthetic copycat versions of the drug, under Schedule I in the Controlled Substances Act.

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“Anyone caught trafficking these illicit poisons will be punished with a mandatory ten-year minimum sentence in prison,” President Trump said during the ceremony. “We’ll be getting the drug dealers, pushers and peddlers off our street, and we will not rest until we have ended the drug overdose epidemic.”

Along with longer prison sentences for dealers, moving fentanyl to that categorization will give law enforcement more power to stop the spread of the drug. Specifically, they’ll have more tools when it comes to those copycat versions that help drug manufacturers get around the Controlled Substances Act.

A Reuters report shows much of the epidemic is fueled by chemicals from China making their way to Mexican drug cartels, who then synthesize those chemicals into fentanyl.

“We’ve been supportive of this legislation because law enforcement needs predictability about what fentanyl is, and having permanent scheduling of it is a critical feature not only for law enforcement but also for international partnerships to help reduce the supply to the country,” Kevin Roy, Chief Public Policy Officer at Shatterproof, told Straight Arrow News.

Shatterproof is a national nonprofit focused on reducing the impact of addiction on the country.

“These are just pieces of a national strategy,” Roy continued. “So, stopping fentanyl is a core element of that, and this is an important day in that regard, but it’s only one piece of a strategy.”

Fentanyl in America

The levels of fentanyl inside America have reached incredibly dangerous numbers and killed 450,000 people over the past decade.

In Texas alone, officials announced in January the results of Operation Lone Star, showing the expansive nature of the fentanyl smuggling trade. They say that operation helped them seize more than 622 million lethal doses of fentanyl, enough to kill every person in the U.S., Mexico and Canada combined.

President Trump has been extremely critical of Mexico, Canada and China over the flow of fentanyl into the U.S.

Just two milligrams of fentanyl, equal to just a few grains of salt, is enough to kill someone.

Fentanyl deaths more than tripled from 2016 to 2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

It remains the leading cause of drug overdose deaths in America. However, overdose deaths have dropped to their lowest levels since June 2020, according to the CDC.

“I think when you look at the slight decline in overdose deaths year over year, you know, we should celebrate any reduction in loss of life. However, we really need to keep it in perspective,” Roy said. “This is still catastrophically high in terms of the number of deaths.”

Drug research

While the HALT Fentanyl Act focuses on the crackdown of fentanyl in the country, it also adds special provisions for researchers working with fentanyl.

It can be difficult for researchers to get approval to obtain samples of Schedule I drugs, which now includes fentanyl.

The hope is that researchers will be able to learn more about the effects of fentanyl and other synthetic drugs on the human body.

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Why this story matters

The passage of the HALT Fentanyl Act, signed by President Donald Trump, addresses the ongoing opioid epidemic by enhancing legal measures against fentanyl trafficking, increasing research provisions and responding to rising overdose deaths in the United States.

Legal enforcement

The legislation strengthens law enforcement powers by permanently classifying fentanyl and related substances as Schedule I, implementing mandatory minimum sentences for traffickers, and aiming to deter the supply of these drugs.

Public health impact

Fentanyl remains the leading cause of drug overdose deaths in America, with authorities and health officials noting its high lethality and the urgent need to address its widespread effects.

Drug research

Provisions in the act facilitate research on fentanyl and synthetic opioids, which experts hope will improve understanding and inform more effective prevention and treatment strategies.

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Community reaction

Families who have lost loved ones to fentanyl overdoses spoke at public events, emphasizing the personal toll of the crisis. Victims’ advocates, such as Anne Funder and Gregory Swan, have formed networks to educate schools and communities. Health departments and public health coalitions have expressed concern over funding uncertainty’s impact on local responses.

Context corner

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid originally developed for medical use, now widely trafficked illicitly. The opioid crisis escalated after the widespread promotion of prescription painkillers, eventually shifting to synthetic opioids like fentanyl. U.S. drug policy historically focused on law enforcement, but recent years have also highlighted public health approaches for treatment and prevention.

Do the math

In the past year, the CDC reported 82,000 drug deaths, a decrease from previous highs. The federal government withheld about $140 million in grants for overdose response, roughly half the OD2A program’s funds. Mandatory minimum penalties now apply for trafficking 10 grams (five years) and 100 grams (ten years) of fentanyl.

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Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left centers on the Trump administration’s withholding of $140 million in fentanyl response funding, portraying this as bureaucratic sabotage endangering lives, using charged phrases like “withholds” and “throwing in the towel” to evoke frustration over neglected addiction treatment.
  • Media outlets in the center moderate this clash, highlighting bipartisan cooperation and debating potential research and incarceration impacts, illustrating how ideological priorities shape framing despite shared acknowledgment of the fentanyl crisis’s urgency.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize strong enforcement, glorifying “cracking down” on traffickers and framing Trump’s actions as decisive law-and-order victories without addressing funding concerns.

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