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FBI Probes Snapchat's Role In Fentanyl Poisoning Deaths (latimes.com) 65

Federal agencies are questioning Snapchat's role in the spread and sale of fentanyl-laced pills in the United States as part of a broader probe into the deadly counterfeit drugs crisis. The Los Angeles Times reports: FBI agents and Justice Department attorneys are zeroing in on fentanyl poisoning cases where the sales were arranged to young buyers via Snapchat [...]. The agents have interviewed parents of children who died and are working to access their social media accounts to trace the suppliers of the lethal drugs, according to the people. In many cases, subpoenaed records from Snapchat have shown that the teenagers thought they were buying prescription painkillers, but the pill they swallowed was pure fentanyl -- a synthetic opioid 100 times more potent than morphine.

On Wednesday, the involvement of technology companies in the ongoing fentanyl crisis will be discussed on Capitol Hill at a House Energy and Commerce Committee roundtable. One of the listed speakers, Laura Marquez-Garrett, an attorney with the Social Media Victims Law Center, said Snapchat will be the focus. "The death of American children by fentanyl poisoning is not a social media issue -- it's a Snapchat issue," she said. [...] While dealers use many social media platforms to advertise their drugs, experts, lawyers and families say Snapchat is the platform of choice for arranging sales. Dealers prefer to use Snapchat because of its encrypted technology and disappearing messages -- features that have given the platform an edge over its rivals for fully legitimate reasons and helped it become one of the world's most popular social media apps for teens.

Former White House drug czar Jim Carroll said drug traffickers are always going to flock to where the young people are. "From everything I have read, I do believe that Snapchat has been more widely used for facilitating drug sales," than other platforms, said Carroll, who serves on Snap's safety advisory council and now works for Michael Best Consulting. "I think that's because of its popularity among the young." In December, Snap reported 363 million daily active users in its quarterly earnings report. That same month, the National Crime Prevention Council wrote a letter to Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland, urging the Justice Department to investigate Snap and its business practices. "Snapchat has become a digital open-air drug market allowing drug dealers to market and to sell fake pills to unsuspecting tweens and teens," the letter said. Garland didn't respond, but federal investigators have started to ask questions, multiple people said.
Santa Monica-based Snap, which makes Snapchat, said it has worked with law enforcement for years to clamp down on illegal activity on its platform and has boosted moderation efforts to detect illegal drug sales. Last year, Snap said it removed more than 400,000 user accounts that posted drug-related content.

"We are committed to doing our part to fight the national fentanyl poisoning crisis, which includes using cutting-edge technology to help us proactively find and shut down drug dealers' accounts," Rachel Racusen, a Snap spokeswoman, said in an emailed statement.
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FBI Probes Snapchat's Role In Fentanyl Poisoning Deaths

Comments Filter:
    • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:25PM (#63241125)
      "Snap Inc. is an American camera and social media company, founded on September 16, 2011, by Evan Spiegel, Bobby Murphy, and Reggie Brown based in Santa Monica, California." Google is your friend!
      • Yeah, you can make that argument, but have you looked at EDGAR to see their filings? If they are exempt from filing the details (i.e. they are privately held), you know very little about them from publicly available information. It's like the "investors" who gave the money to Slashdot's parent company to by Slashdot. if they are a public company, you have a lot more visibility on the workings, but you still probably don't know who the investors are, and you don't know who is pulling the strings unless you'r
  • If you want to stop the "fentanyl poisoning crisis", look at what started it. Access to prescription opiates was restricted, and so the cartels stepped in with something deadlier. Entirely predictable.

    If you want to stop the "fentanyl poisoning crisis", you set up methadone and buprenorphine clinics so addicts will at least know how much they're taking.

    If you want to stop the "fentanyl poisoning crisis", you promote a society worth living in, so people don't feel the need to check out with dope in the first

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Locke2005 ( 849178 )
      The fentanyl crisis will end when all the people taking fentanyl either die or get into treatment programs. I'm happy with them ending their addiction either way. Let's help the people that actually want to be helped by funding evidence-based treatment programs for them.
      • So never, because new addicts start every day. But it *could* end if we knocked off the harmful war on drugs approach, and supplied known doses of pharma painkillers and/or heroin. Prohibition isn't actually stopping anyone from getting opioids, and no matter how much harder we crack down a century of such efforts have proven it won't ever work. But ODs would plummet with known-dose pure products, and nobody would even want fent because there's virtually no euphoria.
        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          You can also restrict the flow of fentanyl into the country, just stop illegal human trafficking across the Southern border.

          • Relatively few drugs get in that way, so that wouldn't really effect it

            One of the main reasons drug dealers are preferring fentanyl is because you need very little of it that it's incredibly difficult to find if hidden, and it's synthetic, so you don't need large plots of vulnerable land to farm it.

            It's just like prisons trying to stop drugs by stopping mail delivery. Most drugs get in through guards.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by quonset ( 4839537 )

      If you want to stop the "fentanyl poisoning crisis", you set up methadone and buprenorphine clinics so addicts will at least know how much they're taking

      If my tax dollars can't go to a girl or woman who's been raped to get an abortion, I most certainly do not want it going to someone who has chosen to do drugs.

      If you want to stop the "fentanyl poisoning crisis", you promote a society worth living in, so people don't feel the need to check out with dope in the first place.

      That's where you're going? It's soci

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Rats kept in an enriched stress free environment show little interest in opoid laced water. Rets kept in standard lab cages can't get enough opioids.

        How 'bout some evidence based statecraft?

      • You’ve never used drugs?

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      25 d years ago drug pushers were free to advertise direct to consumers. The recreational prescription market was thrown wide open. On average in many US states there was one recreation drug prescription written for every citizen

      In that time the overdose death rate tripled from around 5 per hundred thousand to 15. Which was became a crisis for some even tough these people were voluntary ending their lives with doctors approval. So the great experiment ended. Drug mills were closed down. Prescription rates

      • Wrong. The overdose crisis didn't start until after chain pharmacies agreed to stop filling opiate prescriptions, the CDC opiate prescribing guidelines tightened up, hydrocodone compounds were moved to DEA schedule II, and OxyContin was reformulated, doctors started getting sued, etc etc.

        All that happened in the mid-2010s. That is when overdoses spiked. Not in 2005, not in 1995, not while the pill mills were in full swing.

        • by fermion ( 181285 )
          That is simplistic. CDC data suggests that overdose death, or drug poisoning, was pretty constant to the mid 1990s. Then it began to rise. The 2005 spike was meth. The deaths were dominated by prescription opioids until about 2015 when heroin and synthetics took the lead. It was about 2015 or 2016 that enforcement put mists states below one prescription per person.
    • Re: No mystery (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:57PM (#63241187)

      Uhhmm... You realize that this case is about people who aren't addicted right? Basically just kids wanting to get high, probably to impress their friends. All the free methadone in the world won't fix that. And TFS doesn't specify, but if this pure fentanyl pill is as big as the typical oxy pill, that's enough fentanyl to kill a horse. I'm surprised it's not cut with anything, but then fentanyl is cheap. Your comments about the cartels going to it is wrong for this reason as well, it's because it's a purely synthetic drug, and it's even cheaper to make.

      • It *is* cut with something, because a small pill made from pure Fentanyl is enough to kill not a horse, but a whole school full of children.
        https://www.statnews.com/2016/... [statnews.com] has a very nice picture that shows the problem clearly.

      • by vilain ( 127070 )
        I'm wondering why states aren't jumping on this now that thiopentathol is being restricted for executions. Why not substitute fentanyl instead?
        • Not enough suffering. The suffering is the point. Otherwise we'd use quick, painless, and safe to others inert gas asphyxiation, which couldn't be stopped because of the large scale industrial use of the gases and lack of the kinds of legal restrictions drugs have.
    • The victims in question are teens popping pills for the same reason why all teens experiment with drugs. They aren't necessarily addicts yet. But they're still looking to get high.

      Increasing access to even more dope leads to situations like San Fran and the street shutters.

    • Yes. But you missed the first step: Getting people hooked on prescription opioids. Too many doctors used them as first and not last way to treat pain, or had to do that as way too many people have a too high tolerance for regular pain med due to careless everyday use.

  • So... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:21PM (#63241119)
    So now we can hold the phone companies responsible for drug deals arranged over the phone? Isn't Snapchat just as much of a common carrier as the phone/cellular companies are?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by test321 ( 8891681 )

      can hold the phone companies responsible for drug deals arranged over the phone?

      Phone communications were regulated at the time privacy mattered, similarly as paper mail. Phone communications are private and the carrier holds no responsibility on the contents of phone or paper mail communications.

      Modern on-the-internet companies chose to not register as telcos. They chose to claim the messages exchanged on their networks are inherently insecure and can intercepted by intermediaries, including by them for data mining, and they make big money with that. It also means they gained a certai

    • Because snapchat uses that new-fangled internet thingy. Completly different as everyone this internet is a series of pipes full of porn and drugs.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      SnapChat chooses to regulate, inspect, filter and mine the content on their platform as a business feature. So they're not common carriers, they're editors, like newspapers and responsible for whatever happens on their platform.

  • by ChoGGi ( 522069 ) <slashdot@NosPAm.choggi.org> on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:26PM (#63241129) Homepage

    "We are committed to doing our part to fight the national fentanyl poisoning crisis, which includes using cutting-edge technology to help us proactively find and shut down drug dealers' accounts," Rachel Racusen, a Snap spokeswoman, said in an emailed statement.

    The Drug Enforcement Administration subpoenaed Snapchat for her son's messages and, the complaint states, it took nine months for the platform to respond.

    Police subpoenaed Snapchat for his messages, too, and found he had arranged to purchase Percocet from a dealer who used the Snapchat account Arnoldo_8286. It took Snapchat seven months to remove the dealer from its platform, the complaint states.

  • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:27PM (#63241133)
    Snapchat's claim to fame was that the pictures would auto-delete after being viewed. If the FBI has copies of the messages, doesn't it mean that claim is a LIE?
  • Orly? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:39PM (#63241159)

    "The death of American children by fentanyl poisoning is not a social media issue -- it's a Snapchat issue," she said.

    Sounds to me like it's a drug issue.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by cas2000 ( 148703 )

      It's not a drug problem, it's a drug prohibition problem.

      There's never been a drug-related problem that prohibition didn't make a million times worse.

      If low-dose codeine were available OTC (* see below) and stronger opiates were readily available by prescription without doctors risking losing their license to prescribe then people wouldn't need to turn to the black market.

      Black market drugs are of unknown quality and unknown strength, with unknown impurities, and all manner of dangerous short-cuts during pr

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        It's not a drug problem, it's a drug prohibition problem.

        There's never been a drug-related problem that prohibition didn't make a million times worse.

        This.

        If the US didn't have such a hard on over locking up as many people as possible over largely benign crimes like possession, kids would still be smoking weed like they do in other countries.

        And don't get me started on that insane 21 years before you're allowed a drink. You can kill in the army at 16 but a kid cant have a bottle until 21.

    • It is a parenting issue. They either don't want to parent or are afraid to parent.
  • The implication of the article is that only children are fentanyl abusers. I was under the impression that most were people that got started on other opiates for pain, hence older people that wouldn't be using Snapchat!
    • I don't get that from the article at all, what I get is that "children are buying fentanyl unknowingly and dying". The article is not talking about drug addicts (they too die from unknowingly ingesting Fentanyl, also thinking they are getting something else), it's just focussing on a separate-but-very-related trend: selling Fentanyl-laced drugs to a younger clientele. These teenagers are not "fentanyl abusers", they are not addicts, they are kids looking to party and be cool and have fun with drugs. A lot

      • Damn... you mean drug dealers don't follow the truth in labeling laws? That is a problem! Fortunately, some police stations are now volunteering to test your drugs for you free, just bring them on down the the station!
    • They're just focusing on the most egregious examples of the problem first, which is a reasonable thing to do. Most fentanyl abusers are not middle-class kids who got addicted to opiates in the course of legitimate medical care, but a few are.
  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:43PM (#63241169)

    Snapchat, Telegram et. al. are communication mechanisms. They're not Silk Road FFS. What the Feds don't like is the inability to wiretap a Snapchat session w/o having to jump through hoops to obtain private communications via the Patriot Act because of the war on { drugs, terror, trafficking, and anything else we can make up}. But hey, it's not like the DOJ has ever violated the Patriot Act or its provisions before, right? [jurist.org]

    The Patriot Act must die, if the feds want your communications they need to go to a judge and get a warrant first.

  • I bet when that guy in sneakers brought out the iphone
    he never thought this would happen.

  • to know who had the good shit, who was throwing a rager while their parents were out of town, and whose genitals smelled like what.

    Just more grandstanding to show the they're Doing Something...anything...except making an example of a few dealers and drug runners so the rest of them learn to tone it down around the youngins.

  • by tiqui ( 1024021 ) on Thursday January 26, 2023 @01:44AM (#63241417)

    They're supposed to be a Federal bureau that INVESTIGATES. Over the decades they have become a federal police agency.

    They're supposed to be politically neutral. They've gradually become a police force that treats the left and right very differently.

    Consider: Is the huge increase in fentanyl-related deaths caused by Snapchat or by TONS of fentanyl pouring across the southern border?

    Snapchat is not transporting a single dose of fentanyl into the country. By opening the border ILLEGALLY, the Biden administration is directly responsible for millions of doses of fentanyl entering the country. If you were a truly unbiased federal investigator looking into the fentanyl deaths, would you examin Snapchat, or the current president and his underlings?

    This is the same FBI that, a year before the 2020 election, had proof that the allegations of Trump-Russia collusion were lies, AND had proof that Hunter Biden's laptop was real (it contains proof of numerous crimes) yet hid the laptop and pushed social media companies to bury the info while continuing to investigate Trump. If thinking about the Bad Orange Man hurts your head too much, then imagine the same fact pattern but with some other person as a placeholder for Trump ... because this is about far more than Trump - it's a basic principle of government. Career government employees and their agencies are not supposed to be putting their fingers on the scales of justice or on the elections.

  • Dealers do not want to kill their customers.
  • Those are people who died, died

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