DEA chemists inside the agency’s Miami drug lab are raising the volume on their warnings after recent analyses found fentanyl and carfentanil turning up together in seized samples. In one case, a single kilo tested at roughly 16 percent fentanyl and also contained carfentanil. The reappearance of the powerful veterinary tranquilizer, combined with mixes that may blunt standard overdose responses, has federal scientists and local officials scrambling to update public health and enforcement plans.
Inside the Miami lab
On a recent tour, lab director Allen Catterton described the Miami facility as the busiest in the DEA system, handling an outsized share of the agency’s evidence and court testimony. Forensic chemist Alyssa Sanchez told reporters that one seized kilo measured about 16 percent fentanyl and contained carfentanil, a mix experts consider particularly dangerous, according to Tampa Bay 28.
Why carfentanil changes the calculus
Carfentanil is roughly 100 times more potent than fentanyl, which means a single pill or a small pocket of powder can dramatically increase the odds of multiple fatal overdoses. The DEA warns that some of the newest mixes may require higher or multiple doses of naloxone to reverse an overdose. A peer-reviewed analysis of Florida data found a measurable resurgence in carfentanil-involved deaths in recent years, according to a study in Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
How traffickers are getting these chemicals
Federal prosecutors and DEA leaders say darknet marketplaces and online suppliers have widened traffickers’ access to precursor chemicals and technical know-how, giving cartel networks room to experiment with novel mixes. That shift in the supply chain has already surfaced in indictments and public statements from Miami officials, as reported by the U.S. Department of Justice…