Sunday, August 31, 2025

Fentanyl Involved In 70% Of US Drug Overdose Deaths

Fentanyl Involved In 70% Of US Drug Overdose Deaths

BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, AUG 30, 2025 - 07:45 PM

Perhaps the most dangerous thing about fentanyl is the fact that, due to its low price and high potency, it is often used to lace other drugs.

Whether it’s heroin, cocaine, meth or counterfeit pills mimicking prescription opioids such as Vicodin or Oxycontin – fentanyl is frequently used to increase the potency of illicit drugs, often unbeknownst to the user.

As Statista's Felix Richter reports, this hidden presence dramatically increases the risk of accidental overdose, since people may take what they believe is a familiar drug but are actually playing a game of Russian Roulette, always in danger of ingesting a lethal dose of fentanyl.

According to CDC datasynthetic opioids, i.e. mostly fentanyl, are now involved in 7 out of 10 overdose deaths in the U.S. after having contributed to a dramatic surge in drug-related mortality over the past decade. 

Infographic: Fentanyl Involved in 7 in 10 U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

Due to the aforementioned, often hidden presence of fentanyl in other drugs, it has dramatically driven up overdose deaths involving drugs like cocaine or methamphetamine as well and is now involved in 76 percent of cocaine overdose deaths and in 66 percent of overdose deaths involving methamphetamine or other psychostimulants.

Between 2013 and 2023, the number of overdose deaths involving cocaine has surged sixfold from less than 5,000 to almost 30,000 – an increase almost entirely driven by the rise of fentanyl.

The same trend can be observed for meth and other psychostimulants, which were involved in 35,000 overdose deaths in 2023, up from 3,600 ten years earlier.

The following chart, based on the latest CDC data, illustrates what makes fentanyl such a vicious drug. Incredibly potent and dangerous on its own, it turns the use of other drugs into a deadly gamble.


Intenyional sabotage or bureaucratic laziness

Homeland's Noem Fires 24 FEMA Employees After Data Breach

BY TYLER DURDEN
SUNDAY, AUG 31, 2025 - 05:45 AM

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has fired 24 workers at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) after a cyber breach threatened national security, she announced on Aug. 29.

A cyber hacker breached FEMA systems, but no sensitive data was taken from any Department of Homeland Security (DHS) networks, the department reported. FEMA is an agency within the DHS.

FEMA’s chief information officer, chief information security officer, and 22 other IT employees allegedly responsible for the security failure were immediately terminated.

The Epoch Times' Jill McLaughlin reports that Noem accused longtime employees of working to prevent DHS personnel from solving the problem and downplaying how bad the breach was when DHS stepped in to fix the issue.

While conducting a routine cybersecurity review, the DHS’s chief information officer discovered “significant security vulnerabilities” that gave a hacker access to FEMA’s network.

“The investigation uncovered several severe lapses in security that allowed the threat actor to breach FEMA’s network and threaten the entire Department and the nation as a whole,” the DHS reported.

Noem had ordered the review of all of FEMA’s operations and IT systems, according to DHS.

The alleged failures included an agency-wide lack of multi-factor authentication, use of prohibited legacy protocols, failing to fix known vulnerabilities, and inadequate operational visibility.

FEMA spent nearly half a billion dollars on IT and cybersecurity measures in fiscal year 2025.

News of the FEMA security breach and the firings came days after nearly 200 current and former FEMA employees signed a declaration protesting the Trump administration’s disaster response changes.

The employees published a petition to Congress, arguing FEMA is under the leadership of people “lacking legal qualifications, Senate approval, and the demonstrated background required of a FEMA Administrator.”U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks after signing a letter of intent with Chilean Minister of Public Security Luis Cordero for a Biometric Identification Transnational Migrant Alert Program (BITMAP) at the Ministry of the Interior in Santiago de Chile, Chile, on July 30, 2025. Noem announced the firing of two dozen FEMA employees following the discovery of a security breach at the agency on Aug. 29, 2025. Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

The employees alleged that FEMA’s senior officials and Noem hinder the agency’s mission. The declaration also told Congress that the alleged inexperience of Trump’s appointees could lead to another catastrophe similar to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which claimed nearly 1,400 lives in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast of Louisiana and Mississippi.

Early in his second term, Trump criticized how FEMA manages its disaster response and suggested he would consider eliminating or significantly overhauling the agency. He said it would be more efficient for states to handle such responses locally.

The president also ordered the creation of a review council for the agency, citing concerns of political bias in the wake of how it handled Hurricane Helene’s aftermath last year.

Noem said on July 13 that the Trump administration was working to remake the agency, rather than dismantle it.

Chinese Fentanyl Financier Evades U.S. Extradition After Daring Mexico City Tunnel Escape

Chinese Fentanyl Financier Evades U.S. Extradition After Daring Mexico City Tunnel Escape 

BY TYLER DURDEN
SUNDAY, AUG 31, 2025 - 08:40 AM

Submitted by The Bureau's Sam Cooper

In a case reminiscent of the underground prison break of Sinaloa cartel boss "El Chapo" Guzmán, a high-profile Chinese national code-named Chino — who prosecutors say trained Hispanic drug traffickers to operate on U.S. soil, and who has been described as one of the main suppliers of fentanyl and a financial architect for both the Sinaloa and Jalisco Nueva Generación cartels — has suspiciously escaped Mexican custody through a hole in a wall while under house arrest. According to President Claudia Sheinbaum, he had been on the verge of extradition to the United States.

Indictment documents identify him as Zhi Dong Zhang, born in Beijing in 1987, and describe "Chino" as approximately five feet seven inches tall, weighing 175 pounds. He bridged the Chinese and Mexican wings of cartel fentanyl networks — and, significantly, is alleged to have served as a rare operative between Mexico's two largest rival trafficking groups, the Sinaloa and Jalisco Nueva Generación cartels.

Demonstrating the financial reach that underscores what national-security experts have told The Bureau— that Chinese networks exert significant influence over the cartels by controlling both money laundering and chemical precursor supply — Zhang was tied to "approximately 150 companies and approximately 170 bank accounts," according to U.S. investigations.

Zhang, known also as "Brother Wang" and "Pancho," is charged in the Northern District of Georgia with a series of narcotics and financial crimes, including conspiracy to import cocaine and fentanyl, conspiracy to distribute narcotics, and money-laundering conspiracies and monetary transactions affecting interstate and foreign commerce. The government's 30-page detention motion, filed on July 11, 2025, lays out his alleged command role in a transnational network spanning Mexico, the United States, and China — a filing that came just weeks before Mexico extradited 26 cartel prisoners on August 12.

In the early hours of July 11, Zhang reportedly evaded National Guard members stationed outside his residence and slipped through a tunnel connecting his home in the Lomas de Padierna neighborhood to a neighboring property. According to reporting, three outsiders helped him flee — a maneuver quickly compared to El Chapo's 2015 escape from the Altiplano prison.

Sheinbaum confirmed three weeks ago that Zhang had been "about to be extradited to the United States" when he escaped — an unusually frank admission of the diplomatic stakes.

Zhang was detained in an elite Mexico City neighborhood in October 2024 by federal forces acting on a U.S. extradition request. Despite the gravity of the charges, a Mexican judge allowed him to trade prison for guarded house arrest. The Attorney General's Office is now investigating the guards and judicial officials assigned to protect him, Sheinbaum said.

El Universal reported that the company responsible for installing the electronic bracelet that Zhang broke free of was not certified to provide such security and that his escape bore the hallmarks of corruption and collusion.

Mexican media have reported that Zhang is allegedly responsible for trafficking more than 1,000 kilograms of cocaine, 1,800 kilograms of fentanyl, and over 600 kilograms of methamphetamine, generating an estimated $150 million annually in profits, with operations spanning the United States, Central and South America, Europe, China, and Japan.

According to U.S. court filings, Zhang directed the preparation of cocaine and fentanyl shipments in Mexico, arranged smuggling into the United States by couriers using vehicles and aircraft, and managed logistics once the drugs arrived. He also oversaw underground "stash house" cash brokerages where cartel proceeds were collected, counted, and deposited into major U.S. banks, including JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Chase. Distribution points, prosecutors allege, stretched from Georgia and California to Illinois, Ohio, Texas, North Carolina, New York, and Michigan.

In the government's telling, Zhang functioned not only as a financier but as a corporate manager — orchestrating narcotics supply and laundering networks across multiple continents, while directing associates in Atlanta to train Hispanic couriers to make structured cash deposits into U.S. financial institutions.

A raid on one California stash house revealed "approximately 150 companies and approximately 170 bank accounts that were connected to Zhang's organization through wire transfer records and corporate registration information," indictment filings state, leading detectives to "approximately USD $20 million in proceeds that were deposited into bank accounts controlled by Zhang's organization in 2020 and 2021."

Through the interception of encrypted communications on DingTalk, WeChat, and Signal, and admissions by a cooperating conspirator, investigators learned that Zhang served as the critical bridge between two arms of his operation: a Mexican wing responsible for collecting drug proceeds directly from traffickers, and a Chinese wing tasked with laundering the money through bulk cash smuggling, bank deposits, and wire transfers. The evidence portrays Zhang in a command-and-control role, linking fentanyl suppliers in mainland China to the cartel logistics network in Mexico. U.S. national-security experts have separately warned that China's chemical sector — including operators with Chinese Communist Party ties — has been subsidized to produce and export precursor chemicals critical to fentanyl production, providing the geopolitical backdrop to Zhang's activities.

Experts such as former DEA Special Operations Division investigator Donald Im told The Bureau that operators at Zhang's level often maintain significant ties to the Chinese Communist Party — both through underground banking and money-laundering networks, and through privileged access to state-regulated precursor chemical supplies.

In an unrelated post today, responding to a New York Times investigation on Chinese election-interference networks in New York City, former CIA analyst Peter Mattis asserted that the CCP "is comfortable with criminality" and linked its operations to drug-trafficking cases. "We also have the CCP's export of fentanyl precursors as a matter of national policy via VAT rebates," Mattis wrote, citing U.S. congressional investigations and testimony.

California Stash Houses Reveal Cartel Cash in U.S. Banks

In March 2021, detectives raided the residence of a cooperating conspirator in Rowland Heights, California, uncovering a stunning cache of evidence that laid bare the financial backbone of Zhang's network. Inside, authorities found hundreds of documents tied to Zhang's organization: folders containing names, aliases, IDs, passports, corporate registrations, bank records, SIM cards, and post office keys. Many paired photographs with bank accounts investigators later confirmed as belonging to Zhang's associates. The cache revealed at least 25 accounts used to launder cartel proceeds, anchoring the probe that traced drug money from Mexican traffickers through Zhang's Chinese laundering arm and into the U.S. banking system.

The indictment details Zhang's financial footprint. On July 20, 2020, $35,000 and $20,000 were deposited into JPMorgan Chase accounts and $80,000 into a Wells Fargo account, all linked to Zhang's front company Mnemosyne International Trading, Inc.; on December 2–3, 2020, additional deposits included $35,000 into Bank of America, $65,000 into another Chase account, and $50,000 each into two more Chase accounts. Federal forfeiture schedules list seizures of more than $431,000 from a Citibank account, $145,000 from First Citizens Bank, $52,000 from Wells Fargo, and additional tens of thousands from Bank of America and Chase accounts — all alleged narcotics proceeds.

In August and September 2021, acting at Zhang's direction, a cooperating conspirator leased five more stash houses and two vehicles across California — in Los Angeles, Rowland Heights, Diamond Bar, Alhambra, and Monterey Park — for drug and laundering operations, later training an associate known only as "Willy" to manage them.

Court records also detail surveillance of a July 2020 Atlanta operation in which $100,000 in cartel cash was delivered to one of Zhang's associates, Jesus Miranda Cota. Authorities observed Cota make structured deposits: $35,000 into a Chase account, $80,000 into Wells Fargo, and another $20,000 into the Chase account.

In January 2022, investigators say Zhang expanded further. While in Hermosillo, Mexico, he recruited another conspirator, "CC-2," introduced by Willy. In intercepted messages, Zhang and CC-2 discussed shipments into Atlanta, including one initially set at 15 kilograms of cocaine and one kilogram of fentanyl, later adjusted to 10 kilograms of cocaine and one kilogram of fentanyl. In these encrypted exchanges, Zhang used coded language, referring to fentanyl as "coffee" and cocaine as "food."

Zhang is now considered a high-priority fugitive from U.S. justice. Interpol has reportedly issued a red notice.

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Anti Semitism in Boulder is out in the open right down to having an openly jew hater running for Council


Boulder pro-Israel group under siege after deadly June firebombing terror attack

The pro-Israel humanitarian group in Boulder that suffered a deadly antisemitic firebombing attack in June is being terrorized again – as “morally hollow” agitators, including a city council candidate who called the group’s leader a “Nazi,” has forced them to go into hiding, insiders told The Post.

Members of the Run For Their Lives chapter in the lefty Colorado city told The Post “things have gotten crazier” after the June 1 targeted terror attack perpetrated by Egyptian national, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, that killed 82-year-old Karen Diamond and injured some 15 others during its weekly one-mile walk advocating for the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas. 

“Here we are in Boulder where someone was killed and a bunch of people were burned and we have people who are following our walk and screaming at us,” participant Aaron Brooks told The Post, noting the presence of “Free Palestine” posters, the same phrase that the accused terrorist spewed during the hate attack. 

The same pro-Israel humanitarian group that was the target of a firebombing last June has continued to be under fire from “morally hollow” agitators. REUTERS

“Our group has had to move our walk due to protesters led by a city council candidate who I caught on video calling our leader a Nazi. It’s a continuous saga of ridiculousness.”

After haters called the Run for Their Lives group’s leader, Rachel Amaru, a “genocidal c–t,” the decision was made that “the walk for the next four weeks will be at an undisclosed location,” said Brooks, lamenting, “In the aftermath of the attack, we have been harassed and this decision is about safety for the group. 

“We want to walk for the hostages without being harassed.”

A YouTube video posted on August 17 shows Aaron Stone, a Boulder city council candidate, spreading propaganda about Israel and boasting that his platform against the Jewish state is “the thing that got me into the race” as Run For Their Lives leader Amaru implored Stone to lay off the traumatized marchers.

“First they survived the June attack and now they’re dealing with these aggressive counterprotesting Jihadists tormenting them,” Elise, a Run For Their Lives participant, told The Post. “These people are morally hollow. It’s mentally very difficult.”    

Mohamed Sabry Soliman was the main culprit behind the terror attack that killed 82-year-old Karen Diamond, and injured 15 more.

The insult to injury is re-terrorizing survivors, participants added. “They try to portray us walkers as genocidal terrorist Nazis,” said Elise. “It’s all orchestrated and coordinated to intimidate us – most of the counter-protesters justify the attack on us, like we had it coming because we support Israel.

“They think we deserve to be firebombed because we’re Zionists – you’re fair game.”


Jewish leaders are fuming over the hate. 

“Now, instead of receiving support, they’re being harassed again—even by a candidate for Boulder City Council,” Run For Their Lives Denver leader, Miri Kornfeld, told The Post. “This is a chilling reminder of the hatred they’ve endured and the urgent need to stand with them against antisemitism.”

City council candidate and agitator, Aaron Stone, emailed a statement to The Post Saturday that he “condemns” the June terror attack on “innocent people” while also condemning “people marching every Sunday waving Israeli flags while Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza.” 

City council candidate Aaron stone emailed a statement to the post, condeming “people marching every Sunday waving Israeli flags while Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza”. CBS News

He added “they deserve to be called Nazis” because they “support genocide.”


The group vowed the intimidation tactics may have forced them to go into hiding, but it won’t stop them from fulfilling their weekly mission to raise awareness for those still trapped in Hamas hell. 

“They want to harass and intimidate us,” said Brooks, adding, “We’re not hiding and we’re not afraid – we’re just being smart.”


NYC DOE projected to spend $42k per student this school year — the most in the country

NYC DOE projected to spend $42k per student this school year — the most in the country



The city Department of Education will spend a staggering $42,168 per student this school year, budget experts project, even as enrollment declines and student achievement stalls.

The record sum is nearly $2,000 per student more than the DOE spent last year, according to the nonprofit think tank Citizens Budget Commission. Students report to class Sept. 4.

The stunning figure is 36% more than the $31,119 the city spent per pupil just five years ago.

The city Department of Education will spend a record-breaking $42,168 per student this school year. Gorodenkoff – stock.adobe.com

In calculating spending per student, the CBC factors in overall costs for food, transportation, school support services, central administration, pensions, benefits and debt service.


Per-pupil costs are rising as the number of students has gone down. Last year, the city counted about 815,000 students enrolled in K-12 in DOE schools – only 0.1% less than the previous year, but around 100,000 fewer students than in the 2019-2020 school year, according to DOE statistics. 

NYC spends more per pupil than any large city in the nation, with the next-most generous systems, Chicago and Philadelphia, trailing far behind.

Despite the vast sums poured into the nation’s largest school system, student proficiency in English language arts and math continues to lag behind the rest of the state and country. 

The “Nation’s Report Card” released by the National Center for Education Statistics in January revealed that just 33% of Big Apple fourth graders scored proficiency in math and 28% in reading on the National Assessment of Educational Progress last year. 

Older students’ results were worse – 23% of city eighth graders met the national standards in math and 29% in reading.

DOE Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos announced plans to hire more than 3,700 additional teachers across the city James Messerschmidt

In statewide exams given last school year, 52.6% of sixth graders scored proficiency in English Language Arts — up from 45.9% last year, and 47.8% during the 2022-2023 school year, but down from 56.3% in 2021-2022. But comparisons are unreliable because the tests and standards have shifted, and the state has lowered some passing benchmarks so even small gains are inconclusive.

Ray Domanico, a Manhattan Institute senior fellow and education expert, blasted the DOE’s spending as “unsustainable.”


“The system should be consolidating schools and improving effectiveness and efficiency. The money being wasted could be better used to support families, improve health and other services and make streets safer. All of which would help make the city a viable place to raise children,” he said. 

“No parent I know would associate that  level of spending with the quality of education or even lunch food our kids are getting in NYC schools,” said Yiatin Chu, co-president of PLACE NYC, a parent group that advocates for increased rigor in city classrooms.

The DOE’s $41.2 billion budget is a third of the entire city’s.

In April, Mayor Adams and Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos announced plans to hire more than 3,700 additional teachers to reduce class sizes in compliance with a new state law. 

Adams also restored $167 million in cuts to the DOE budget for 3-K and pre-K special-ed classes.

Starting in September, state law will require schools to cap class sizes at 20 students in grades K-3, 23 in grades 4-8 and 25 in high school, with at least 60% of classrooms meeting the limits. All classrooms must meet the caps by September 2028. 

Before Gov. Kathy Hochul signed the bill into law in September 2022, Adams reportedly protested that it would cost too much to implement — about $500 million in K-5 alone. Last year, $10 million of the DOE’s overall budget went to teacher recruitment efforts to meet the demands this year, officials said.

At $23,028, the Philadelphia School District spent the second-most per student in the country in 2022-23.. AP

As student enrollment plateaus, the hiring boom will become one of the main drivers of higher per-pupil spending, the CBC’s Research Vice President Ana Champney told The Post.

“Hiring teachers in itself isn’t controversial, but there’s no accountability to ensure that the money is being spent on high quality teachers, and that it’s not at the expense of losing a music room, art room, gym, etc. because of the class size law,” said Jean Hahn, a parent in Queens schools. 

The City of Chicago School District spent $22,606 per student in the 2022-23 school year — the third-most in the country. Getty Images

A DOE spokesperson defended the rising costs: “New York City Public Schools is the largest school district in the nation, and we will always invest heavily in our students, schools, and staff to ensure every child has access to a world-class education.

“We remain grateful for support from our partners at the city and state level, as we invest more dollars than ever in our schools and students through class size funding, new funding (distribution) for students in temporary housing and schools with higher concentrations of students with needs, collective bargaining that supports our school staff, and funding that replaced expiring stimulus dollars, just to name a few. 


“We all know our students are our future — and any assertion that we should invest less in them would be illogical.”

Additional reporting by Susan Edelman.