The California Highway Patrol (CHP) has announced the results of a major operation that spanned a 10-block radius in the Tenderloin neighborhood in northeastern San Francisco. According to Gov. Gavin Newsom, the amount of fentanyl seized in the operation
is equal to nearly 10 million lethal doses.
Additionally, CHP issued 6,044 citations, which ultimately led to 496 arrests. Fifteen firearms were also recovered.
"These results are a testament to
the effective collaboration among state, local, and federal law enforcement in San Francisco. We will continue to work together to get drugs off our streets, address crime and make our communities safer," Newsom said in a statement. (Related:
San Francisco drug overdose deaths hit all-time high in 2023 with FENTANYL largely to blame.)
However, these results also reflect how big the drug trafficking industry has become in San Francisco.
CHP officers began deploying to the Tenderloin in May of 2023 with a focus on improving public safety, targeting fentanyl trafficking, disrupting fentanyl supply and busting drug trafficking rings. The Tenderloin operation is part of Gov. Newsom’s broader plan for tackling the fentanyl and opioid crisis, officials said.
A similar joint operation cracking down on fentanyl smuggling
led to around 200 arrests and the recovery of more than 400 stolen vehicles since February.
Just 2 mg of fentanyl is considered a lethal dose
Exposure to
just two milligrams worth of fentanyl is considered a lethal dose, according to the
Drug Enforcement Agency. Tom Wolf, a recovery advocate who used to be a homeless drug addict living in San Francisco's streets, knows all too well
how dangerous fentanyl can be.
In 2018, he was living in the streets of San Francisco and hooked on both heroin and fentanyl, leading to his arrest.
"It’s a struggle because you’ll basically do anything to feed that addiction," said Wolf, who applauded the CHP's operation but stressed that treating addiction is just as important as preventing the spread of fentanyl.
"In June, I'll have six months clean and sober and that's because I was held accountable," said Wolf. "I had to go to jail for a few months, and then I went to a six-month residential treatment program."
Wolf now works with the Salvation Army's transitional housing program as a consultant
helping people battle addiction. He represents a good example of a former drug addict who turned his life around.
"We just need to stop this revolving door that we have of organized drug dealers that keep being arrested and then getting released to pretrial diversion, and then they head right back out on the street to sell drugs," said Wolf.
Learn more about the fentanyl crisis gripping the United States at
Opioids.news.
Watch this video discussing
the largest fentanyl bust in the history of the state of Michigan.
This video is from the
Justin Barclay channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
Mexican cartels smuggling drugs, trafficking people into Native American reservations thanks to Biden's open border policy.
QUACKCINE "expert" and eugenicist Janet Woodcock, who approved Pfizer's mRNA jab, also approved oxycontin and fentanyl.
Mexican drug cartels fighting over control of Montana, "the last best place" to sell illicit substances in America.
Oregon officials declare state of emergency over FENTANYL CRISIS in Portland (stemming from open borders policies endorsed by Dems).
Homeless convicted pedophile arrested after camping near San Francisco school and offering "free fentanyl for new users."
Sources include:
LawEnforcementToday.com
NBCBayArea.com
KTVU.com
Brighteon.com