AG Jeff Jackson’s Newsletter on Fentanyl

On May 22nd Jeff Jackson’s newsletter featured details on the lawsuit filed against WeChat which is a key enabler of the fentanyl epidemic.


Last week, South Carolina’s Attorney General, Alan Wilson, joined me for a press conference.

He had accepted my invitation to make an announcement together.

That’s two different states – and two different parties – standing together for one reason.

Folks, it’s time to tell you about something I’ve been working on.


Fentanyl is the leading cause of death for people my age and younger. In North Carolina, we lose about six people a day.

It’s really the third wave of the opioid crisis that began with OxyContin in the 1990s. That was the prescription pill crisis, which became the heroin crisis, which became the synthetic heroin crisis, and that’s fentanyl.

As AG, I’ve met a lot of families who have lost loved ones. It’s crushing. And I have a responsibility to attack this problem on every front I can.

One of those fronts is illegal money laundering – the engine that makes the fentanyl trade so profitable. And I’m starting with a very big target.

How the Fentanyl Trade Works

Here’s a quick outline:

Step 1: Drug cartels in Mexico buy the chemical ingredients for fentanyl from China. Those ingredients are shipped to Mexico, mostly in large cargo ships but sometimes as regular air parcels via commercial carriers, like FedEx.

Step 2: The cartels mix those chemicals and produce fentanyl.

Step 3: The fentanyl is smuggled into the U.S., taken to various cities that serve as distribution hubs (often where highways intersect), then sold to dealers, who sell to users.

Step 4 (this is the money laundering part): The cash from the drug sales doesn’t go back to Mexico – not directly. Instead, it’s laundered through an underground banking network run by money brokers, often in China.

It’s important to know that China limits how much money its citizens can move out of the country – no more than $50,000 a year. But many wealthy Chinese nationals want to move more.

So brokers in China connect the two markets: the cartel’s drug traffickers in the U.S. and Chinese nationals who want to move their money out of the country and into U.S. dollars.

The broker accepts the cartel’s drug money, finds someone who wants to get money out of China, and makes a match.

Then the broker essentially says, “Ok, Mr. Cartel Guy – this Chinese currency is now yours. You can now buy anything you want that is made in China and we’ll ship it to you.”

And once those goods (often cars and farm equipment) are shipped from China to Mexico, the cartels arrange for them to be sold into the domestic market for pesos, at which point they collect their profit.

How much money are we talking about here?

Billions.

The WeChat connection

The evidence strongly suggests that the main platform used to facilitate that money laundering is an app called WeChat.

You’ve probably heard of WhatsApp. It’s the largest text messaging app in the world.

Well, the second-largest text messaging app is WeChat. It’s owned by a Chinese company and has over a billion users.

And when it comes to fentanyl money laundering, as one DEA agent said, “It’s all happening on WeChat.”

So I spent months digging into it. Talking with agents. Reading reports. When I felt like I had the full picture, I called five other attorneys general – two Democrats, three Republicans. I asked them to join me in stopping WeChat from being a safe harbor for money laundering.

They all agreed.

So we worked on our plan and last week we took the first step, which AG Wilson and I announced at our press conference (the other AGs were invited but live too far away to attend).

The first step is a public letter to WeChat summarizing some of the evidence about their complicity in a vast amount of money laundering and giving them 30 days to respond with a detailed account of steps they will now take to stop this.

If they fail to respond, we have a range of options for escalation.

But as I said at our press conference:

“Evidence suggests that WeChat has allowed itself to become an enormous digital pipeline for money laundering that fuels the fentanyl trade. By allowing that to continue, WeChat is essentially helping to bankroll the fentanyl epidemic. This must stop.”

I’ll let you know what we hear back, and that will determine next steps.

AmeriCorps lawsuit

One more quick update:

We recently filed a lawsuit against the federal administration after it attempted to unlawfully defund AmeriCorps.

Congress authorized AmeriCorps funding, and the executive branch cannot unilaterally cut it.

But beyond that, it would have hit western North Carolina especially hard as it’s rebuilding from Hurricane Helene. AmeriCorps has a strong presence there.

We had a hearing this week on a request for an injunction to stop the government from cutting this vital program. We expect to hear soon how the first round of that case will go.

Best,

Jeff

P.S. Avery stopped by the office the other day. Here she is signing some very important papers:

AGs in both Carolinas target Chinese app linked to international fentanyl trade

Read the original article on the SC Daily Gazette website.

The Chinese messaging app WeChat has more than a billion users globally

Attorney General Alan Wilson speaks at a news conference on Monday, May 12, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C., about an effort to hold WeChat, a Chinese messaging app, accountable for its role in the fentanyl trade. He’s accompanied by North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson and Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Lt. Robert Sprague. (Photo courtesy of Attorney General Alan Wilson’s Office)

Attorneys general from six states, including both Carolinas, say they’re demanding accountability from WeChat, a Chinese messaging and payment platform being used by fentanyl traffickers.

The bipartisan group is giving WeChat, what’s become known as a super app, a month to detail what steps it’s taking, if any, to combat its use as a money launderer for the international drug trade.

“We need answers; we need them now,” Republican Alan Wilson, South Carolina’s attorney general since 2011, said at a news conference Monday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Standing beside him was North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson, a Democrat.

Continue reading “AGs in both Carolinas target Chinese app linked to international fentanyl trade”

North Carolina attorney general targets popular texting app linked to fentanyl crisis

Read the original article and watch the video on the WECT website.

WILMINGTON, N.C. (WECT) – North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson is cracking down on a popular texting app that he says is helping fuel the fentanyl epidemic.

In a Monday announcement, Jackson and five other attorneys general said they’ve sent a letter to the leaders of the app “WeChat” for allegedly playing a role in fentanyl money laundering.

“We wanna hit the cartels where it hurts,” Jackson told WECT. “And where it hurts is this money laundering, this digital pipeline that has opened up.”

The Chinese-based app, with over a billion users around the world and thousands in North Carolina, is designed to support encrypted communication between people, and also has an integrated payment system. But criminals are using that payment system, Jackson said, to launder drug money.

WeChat is at the center of a triangle of criminal activity between the United States, China, and cartels, Jackson said. The cartels move fentanyl into the U.S., and the sales money then goes to China. Laundered money and goods then move “discreetly” from China back to the cartels, Jackson said, with communication and money transfers often going through WeChat.

This graphic shows the ‘pipeline’ by which fentanyl is brought into the US and payments are funneled through Chinese money launderers back to the cartels.(NC DOJ)

“The motive for most crime is money. If you want to reduce the crime, you reduce the money. The way we reduce the money here is focusing on WeChat,” he said.

The attorney general said he’s given WeChat 30 days to identify potential solutions to the issue. The app has “yet to adequately address the exploitation of its platform by criminal actors,” the announcement said.

A comment request from a WeChat representative wasn’t immediately returned.

“We want them to do enough to change the reputation that WeChat has, because right now, WeChat has a reputation as a safe haven for facilitating money laundering,” Jackson said.

The fentanyl crisis has affected communities around the state and country; with roughly six per day, overdoses from the drug are now the leading cause of death for people under the age of 45 in North Carolina, according to the North Carolina Department of Justice.

Monday’s announcement also cited several recent investigations and criminal cases that involved WeChat being used in fentanyl-related money laundering:

  • “The 2021 conviction of Xizhi Li, who managed an international criminal network using WeChat to coordinate bulk cash transfers between Chinese banks and drug cartels.
  • Operation Chem Capture (2023), in which eight companies and 12 individuals were indicted for trafficking fentanyl precursor chemicals, with transactions coordinated through WeChat.
  • Collaboration between Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel and Chinese laundering networks, which regularly use WeChat to facilitate cash pickups, currency swaps, and repatriation of drug proceeds.
  • A recent 2024 federal indictment in South Carolina, charging three defendants with using WeChat to communicate in order to launder proceeds from fentanyl sales as part of an international conspiracy.”

Chinese app sits at the center of fentanyl epidemic, NC attorney general says

Read the original article on the Charlotte Observer website.

North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson speaks to the crowd following a press briefing on President Trump’s executive orders on Friday, January 31, 2025 at the State Capitol in Raleigh, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

At the center of the fentanyl crisis sits a Chinese messaging app, six attorneys general said in a letter to the encrypted platform Monday.

WeChat could face criminal charges for allowing dealers and money launderers to seamlessly funnel billions between Mexican cartels, Chinese money laundering organizations and U.S. dealers, said North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson in Charlotte Monday.

Jackson and five other attorneys general in a published letter are demanding the company by June 11 describe “what steps, if any, WeChat has taken in response to (evidence) of WeChat being used to facilitate money laundering by fentanyl traffickers.”

Jackson posted the letter on his office’s website following the Charlotte news conference Monday. It also was signed by attorneys general from as far away as Colorado to as close as South Carolina.

The China-based app used by billions of people in China and nearly 20 million in the United States could face criminal charges under North Carolina’s new anti-money laundering law, public nuisance law or federal law, Jackson said.

Read the rest of the article on the Charlotte Observer website.

Leaders urge action amid rising fentanyl crisis in Carolinas

Watch the original video on the WCNC News website.

North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson announced a bipartisan initiative Monday targeting Chinese tech giant WeChat for allegedly facilitating money laundering connected to fentanyl trafficking in the United States.

“WeChat is essentially helping to bankroll the fentanyl epidemic. This must stop,” Jackson said during the announcement.

The effort, joined by five other state attorneys general including South Carolina’s Alan Wilson, accuses WeChat of inadequate measures to combat illegal financial transactions that support drug trafficking.

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