ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) 鈥 reported and co-wrote an that revealed the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration permitted hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills to be distributed in New Mexico as part of an effort to build bigger federal prosecutions.
Mustian, along with AP journalist Joshua Goodman, reviewed hundreds of internal DEA records and interviewed current and former agents, including a whistleblower who claims his agency gambled with public safety and violated U.S. Justice Department rules about seizing the dangerous synthetic opioid. The White House last year designated fentanyl as a 鈥 .鈥
This is an interview of Mustian by Del Quentin Wilber, who edited the story.
It is usually very hard to get such an inside account of DEA operations. Where did the idea come from and how did you track it down?
Goodman, my AP colleague, first spotted the whistleblower complaint accusing the DEA of allowing fentanyl to hit the streets of New Mexico. The report was sent to the White House in September but escaped media attention at the time.
As government records often go, it was heavily redacted to shield not only the whistleblower鈥檚 identity but the amount of fentanyl that was not seized.
There was a critical oversight in the government鈥檚 redactions. I noticed that the whistleblower鈥檚 name ended in an 鈥渓鈥 鈥 a single letter that, for some reason, was missed by the black marker.
I sent a flurry of messages on LinkedIn to DEA agents whose named ended in 鈥渓鈥 and had worked in Albuquerque. One afternoon in March, I was at my desk when I received a response from an agent who connected me to the whistleblower, David Howell. A couple weeks later I flew to New Mexico and met with Howell.
The DEA has long allowed drugs to 鈥榳alk,鈥 as you described it in the story, in an effort to catch bigger dealers. What is different about fentanyl that makes this tactic, in the eyes of some current and former agents, problematic?
The simple answer: the sheer potency and lethality of fentanyl. In its 鈥淥ne Pill Can Kill鈥 campaign, the DEA warns that just a couple of milligrams 鈥 an amount that would fit on the tip of a pencil 鈥 is enough to kill the average adult. Nowadays with fentanyl, we鈥檙e usually talking about counterfeit pills designed to mimic name-brand painkillers. The pills are almost always manufactured by cartels in Mexican labs and contain an unknown amount of fentanyl.
Our reporting highlighted the example of a 2023 fentanyl shipment that DEA agents monitored 鈥 but did not seize 鈥 at an Albuquerque mobile home park. Agents gathered such detailed intelligence that they wrote in their investigative report that 74,000 pills had been delivered. Howell told me that decision, which came as fatal overdoses hit their peak around the country, was akin to 鈥減roviding one fentanyl pill to each person at a football stadium.鈥
Federal officials defended the decision to not seize the drugs.
Alex Uballez, the U.S. attorney in Albuquerque at the time, acknowledged that authorities sometimes 鈥渨alk” drugs in the name of catching an ultimately 鈥渂igger fish鈥 鈥 an approach he said saves more lives than attempting to interdict every shipment.
The DEA said in a statement that 鈥減ublic descriptions suggesting that DEA knowingly permitted fentanyl to reach communities are false and fundamentally mischaracterize the facts.鈥 Spokesperson Amanda Wozniak wrote in an email that 鈥渢he investigative decisions at issue were lawful, reasonable under the circumstances and consistent with Department guidance.鈥
What was the most intriguing take-away for you in the reporting process?
This story highlights the enormous gulf between what law enforcement does with taxpayer resources and what the public knows 鈥 or is supposed to know 鈥 about those activities. That鈥檚 true even in something as consequential as the drug war. Federal agents enjoy enormous discretion and make decisions every day that affect public safety.
In many instances, the government asks us to simply trust it鈥檚 doing the right thing. Indeed, the records we uncovered would not have been released under the Freedom of Information Act. These records and interviews with Howell revealed the complexity of these investigations that we rarely see. Even as Howell鈥檚 complaint was raising serious concerns about allowing fentanyl to reach drug users, DOJ rewrote its non-public rules to afford law enforcement more discretion in deciding whether to seize the deadly painkiller.
The DEA鈥檚 decision to allow fentanyl to hit the streets bothered some long-time agents, one in particular. What did Howell do to raise the issue with his superiors?
Howell, a 19-year veteran of DEA, filed a formal whistleblower in late 2023 with the Office of Special Counsel, a government agency that protects whistleblowers. He submitted DEA reports, emails and text messages, including one in which colleagues discussed a 100,000-pill transaction they witnessed but chose not to stop.
The OSC was initially so concerned that it found a 鈥渟ubstantial likelihood of wrongdoing鈥 and took the unusual step of asking the Justice Department to investigate.
The Justice Department鈥檚 Office of Professional Responsibility, a kind of internal affairs office, found in 2024 that the DEA and U.S. attorney鈥檚 office had made reasonable decisions in deciding to allow drugs to go unseized and that their inaction posed no 鈥渟pecific danger to public health.鈥
Howell and other critics said internal investigators overlooked the question of whether DEA permitted massive amounts of fentanyl to hit the streets.
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