Implementing a new law to punish traffickers of fentanyl and declaring deaths from the drug as a health crisis could curb the damage it is doing to the country.
“The fentanyl crisis the country is facing right now must be confronted at the local, state, and federal level,” Higgins said.
The country has to start working together, he said, adding that the nation needs to confront the border crisis and influx of fentanyl “without abusing law enforcement jurisdictional authority, without abusing sovereignty, [and] without abusing rights.”
Title 42 Reinterpreted
The Biden administration had hoped to end Title 42 by the end of May. Title 42 was the Trump-era initiative put in place in March 2020 to slow the spread of COVID-19, allowing illegal immigrants to be quickly turned away at the southern U.S. border rather than processed at immigration detention facilities under Title 8 immigration law.However, a Texas judge recently blocked the cancellation of the public health order that has been used to expel illegal migrants.
While Higgins is pleased with the extension, he said it is time for a “reinterpretation of Title 42 within the parameters of the Constitution.” According to the lawmaker, “the fentanyl crisis can now be more effectively defined as a health crisis than the COVID pandemic.”
Stop the Flood
Higgins said, “Something has to be done to fight against the fentanyl entering [the United States] through the southern border.”“We have lost operational control of the southern border months ago, and fentanyl is entering the country at unprecedented levels—and there’s no end in sight,” he added.
Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) introduced the bill in January. The bill has been referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Energy and Commerce. Higgins is one of nine co-sponsors of the bill.
He pointed out that “it does not take a lot of fentanyl by volume for traffickers to bring enough to create a large volume of street-level pills.”
“There’s enough coming across the border to produce millions of fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills going into every nook and cranny of the country.” In 2021, for example, there were over 9.5 million counterfeit pills seized by the DEA. And according to the DEA’s office in Phoenix, 40 percent of counterfeit pills seized in Arizona contain a lethal dose of fentanyl.
Higgins places the blame on weak border policies that are allowing illegal aliens with criminal intent to cross the border. “These are not the little families or people that cross the border and go find a border patrol agent to turn themselves in to begin their processing for asylum,” he said.
“Instead, I’m talking about the ones that run, which tells me they have bad intentions and are likely plugged into a criminal network.”
“Kids are dying and it must be stopped,” lamented Higgins. “Life in prison is what some of these criminals deserve.”