even earlier age about its many dangers and horrors. Law enforcement must continue to have the tools it needs to attack criminal groups who facilitate drug addiction. More Americans need treatment options so they can move forward living drug-free lives. We cannot continue to accept these lives lost without serious future action.”
>>> Μην με παρεξηγήσετε >>> αλλά ο τρόπος παρουσίασης από τα ΜΜΕ >>> του πολέμου στην Ουκρανία και των επιπτώσεών του >>> θυμίζει τηλεοπτική εκπομπή, με τοποθέτηση προϊόντος >>> και το προϊόν είναι το αμερικανικό LNG >>> το "καλό", το ακριβό, το αμερικάνικο LNG....
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Τετάρτη 4 Νοεμβρίου 2015
DEA Releases 2015 Drug Threat Assessment: Heroin and Painkiller Abuse Continue to Concern
NOV 4 (WASHINGTON) –
DEA Acting Administrator Chuck Rosenberg today announced results from
the 2015 National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA), which finds that drug
overdose deaths are the leading cause of injury death in the United
States, ahead of motor vehicle deaths and firearms. In 2013, over
46,000 people in the United States died from drug overdose and more than
half of those were caused by prescription painkillers and heroin.
“Sadly
this report confirms what we’ve known for some time: drug abuse is
ending too many lives while destroying families and communities,” Acting
Administrator Rosenberg said. “We must stop drug abuse before it begins
by teaching young people at an
even earlier age about its many dangers and horrors. Law enforcement must continue to have the tools it needs to attack criminal groups who facilitate drug addiction. More Americans need treatment options so they can move forward living drug-free lives. We cannot continue to accept these lives lost without serious future action.”
even earlier age about its many dangers and horrors. Law enforcement must continue to have the tools it needs to attack criminal groups who facilitate drug addiction. More Americans need treatment options so they can move forward living drug-free lives. We cannot continue to accept these lives lost without serious future action.”
The
2015 NDTA also found that Mexican transnational criminal organizations
are the biggest criminal threat to the United States, and are the
primary suppliers of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, and marijuana.
These groups are responsible for the extreme violence seen in Mexico, as
they battle for turf and attack public officials and innocent
civilians. Here in the U.S., affiliated and violent gangs are
increasingly a threat to the safety and security of our communities.
They profit by buying drugs from regional Mexican criminal affiliates
and then supply American streets and communities with these dangerous
drugs, particularly heroin.
Other 2015 NDTA findings:
· Heroin
availability is up across the country, as are abusers, overdoses, and
overdose deaths. Law enforcement nationwide report a significant spike
in heroin abuse as a result of prescription opioid addiction.
· Heroin
overdose deaths are also a result of high-purity batches unknown to the
user, as well as heroin adulterants such as fentanyl.
· Since
2002, prescription drug deaths have outpaced those of cocaine and
heroin combined. Abuse of controlled prescription drugs is higher than
that of cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, MDMA, and PCP combined.
· Fentanyl,
a synthetic opioid 25 to 40 times more potent than heroin, has caused
over 700 deaths in the U.S. between late 2013 and early 2015. Fentanyl
is sometimes added to heroin batches, or sold by itself as heroin,
unknown to the user.
· Synthetic
designer drugs from China continue to wreak havoc in the United States,
particular synthetic cannabinoids, cathinones, and phenethylamines.
Much of the proceeds of the sale of designer synthetic drugs from China
flow to Middle Eastern countries such as Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and
Jordan.
The
National Drug Threat Assessment provides an up-to-date look at the many
challenges local communities face related to drug abuse and drug
trafficking. Highlights in the report include drug abuse and trafficking
trends for drugs such as heroin, prescription drugs, and the many
ever-changing synthetic drugs manufactured overseas and imported to the
United States.
In
the preparation of this report, DEA intelligence analysts considered
quantitative data from various sources (seizures, investigations,
arrests, drug purity or potency, and drug prices; law enforcement
surveys; laboratory analyses; and interagency production and cultivation
estimates) and qualitative information (subjective views of individual
agencies on drug availability, information on smuggling and
transportation trends, and indicators of changes in smuggling and
transportation methods).
The
2013 NDTA factors information provided by more than 1,100 state and
local law enforcement agencies that responded to our 2015 National Drug
Threat Survey.
The National Drug Threat Assessment can be found at www.dea.gov
Εγγραφή σε:
Σχόλια ανάρτησης (Atom)
0 Σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου
Σχόλια και παρατηρήσεις