New Mexico Governor Seeks $1.5 Billion Reparations Over DEA's 1 Million Fentanyl Pills
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 29
New Mexico Governor Seeks $1.5 Billion Reparations Over DEA's 1 Million Fentanyl Pills
3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 29
Summary
Michelle Lujan Grisham demanded the federal government reimburse New Mexico for more than $1.5 billion spent fighting fentanyl addiction, overdoses and related crime after alleging a DEA operation let pills reach communities unchecked.
Between 2023 and 2025, DEA agents allegedly monitored but did not seize large fentanyl shipments—more than 1 million pills by one account—while building broader cases and without notifying state or local officials.
A 21% rise in New Mexico overdose deaths underscored the fallout, and the governor said repeated requests to both the Biden and Trump administrations for more agents and coordinated help went unanswered.
Raúl Torrez, the state attorney general, announced a criminal investigation days earlier into whether the DEA knowingly allowed hundreds of thousands of pills onto New Mexico streets, with possible civil, criminal and structural remedies under review.
Lujan Grisham also urged Congress to ban similar tactics, require advance notice to states, restore about $25 million in federal behavioral-health and public-safety funding, and hold officials involved personally accountable.
Could a state suing the DEA for reparations change how federal agencies operate nationwide?
Did a federal strategy to catch drug kingpins knowingly sacrifice American lives on the ground?
With deadly new tranquilizers mixed into fentanyl, are overdose reversal efforts becoming futile?
New Mexico’s 21% Fentanyl Overdose Spike Triggers State Lawsuit Against DEA Over Lethal Drug Policy
Overview
In late June 2026, a whistleblower complaint revealed that federal officers and prosecutors in New Mexico had allowed fentanyl to be distributed between 2023 and 2025 as part of a strategy to build larger criminal cases against high-level smugglers. This revelation, reported by major news outlets, caused immediate outrage across the state, especially since fentanyl had recently been labeled a 'weapon of mass destruction.' The public and state officials responded swiftly, launching investigations and demanding accountability, as the news highlighted a troubling contradiction between federal enforcement tactics and the urgent need to protect communities from the deadly opioid crisis.