Senate Lawmakers Issue โ€˜Urgent Request’ to President Biden to Close De Minimis โ€˜Loophole’

Two U.S. senators penned an “urgent request” to President Joe Biden this weekend, pushing for the use of executive authority to end the de minimis trade “loophole.”

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Oh.) and Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fl.) on Saturday sent an open letter to the president asking him to end duty-free treatment for e-commerce shipments worth under $800-an exemption created by Section 321 of the Tariff Act.

According to the lawmakers, the rule is being exploited to facilitate “the import of illegal products, goods produced with forced labor, and other contraband to the detriment of U.S. manufacturers, workers and communities.” De minimis doesn’t just provide foreign shippers with financial benefits, they argued-it also allows bad actors to circumvent customs enforcement, as individual packages of lower value often enter the country “with minimal to zero inspections.”

The legislators said that Chinese goods made with forced labor “appear to be the heaviest users of de minimis, undermining enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA).” About 3 million parcels enter the country each day using the de minimis rule, and they pose an “elevated risk” of being made withย forced labor, containing counterfeit products or contributing to the fentanyl crisis, as drugs have been smuggled in small, low-value shipments.

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eBay and the Department of Justice settle over pill press sales

On January 31, 2024, eBay and the U.S. Department of Justice announced a settlement: In return for not prosecuting eBay for alleged violations of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) related to the sale of pill presses and encapsulating machines since 2015, eBay will pay $59 million and strengthen compliance programs around the sale of these machines on their platforms.

In a statement, eBay reiterated that the company โ€œexpressly denies the DOJโ€™s allegations and the settlement does not include any admission of wrongdoing.โ€

The Partnership for Safe Medicines has monitored the online pill press market for years, which means we have witnessed eBayโ€™s efforts to successfully suppress the sale of these products on its platform. In light of this settlement, it is likely that other platforms that could be used to sell pill presses and encapsulating machines may ban these sales rather than undertake the burden of compliance. In the future, pill press sales will likely be confined to overseas platforms that are more difficult for U.S. regulators to reach.

This appears to be the first time that the U.S. Department of Justice has applied the โ€œbrokerโ€ role in this statute to an online marketplace for pill press or encapsulating machine transactions. This follows the Biden administrationโ€™sย novel use of Treasury sanctions against Chinese pill press manufacturers in 2023.

Read the full analysis and the settlement document on the Partnership for Safe Medicines website.

Families, teams hurting from suspected drug-related deaths of 2023 Heritage, Bunn grads

A pair of recent Triangle-area high school graduates who were friends linked through their love of baseball died over the weekend.

Two young men who were friends and shared a love of baseball died over the weekend, devastating families and teammates.

Wilson Moore, a 2023 graduate of Heritage High, and Jacob Cope, who graduated from Bunn High in 2023, both passed away on Saturday.

Both Moore and Cope played on a travel baseball team and their respective high school teams before graduating. The two met through work and developed a friendship. The sudden nature of their deaths shocked and saddened friends and family in recent days.

Moore’s GoFundMe said the family suspects Moore died from “accidental substance poisoning.” Cope, 18, also has a GoFundMe to support his family.

Rolesville police are investigating. A toxicology report has not been finalized.

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Family navigates grief a year after sonโ€™s death

Barry and Lisa Bennett hold a graduation photo of their son, 22-year-old Mason Bennett, who died a year ago Thursday. Olivia Neeley | Times

After a fleeting moment of peace each morning, it doesnโ€™t take long for the gut-wrenching reality to set in for Lisa Bennett.

โ€œWhen you go to sleep and you wake up โ€ฆ you have this brief second where you think everything is fine and (then) it hits you over and over again, day after day,โ€ she said through tears.

For Bennett, her reality is facing yet another day without her 22-year-old son, Mason Bennett. Thursday marks the first anniversary of his death. Bennett contends he died after taking what he believed was a 30 mg Percocet, a prescription painkiller.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t a Percocet,โ€ Bennett said. โ€œIt was a pressed pill, which is mostly whatโ€™s being sold now. There was nothing else in it other than cocaine and fentanyl.โ€

Eight months after Masonโ€™s death, Wilson police charged 21-year-old Claire Brittle in connection with his death. Brittle faces a felony death by distribution charge as well as several drug-related charges.

Police said Brittle was โ€œresponsible for selling the victim narcotics at the time of his death,โ€ according to a Wilson Police Department press release. When police arrested Brittle in October, they found various drugs in her home, including โ€œ85 dosage units of pressed Percocet pills,โ€ according to arrest warrants.

Brittle was also charged with felony possession of a Schedule II controlled substance. Arrest warrants indicate that charge relates to fentanyl possession.

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Fentanyl victims advocacy group holds educational, networking event in Lexington

LEXINGTON, N.C. โ€”

A group of people who lost family members to fentanyl held an educational advocacy and networking event in Lexington.

On Saturday, the group “Fentvic” came together to start safety conversations within the community about the dangers of illicit fentanyl.

The group said they want to focus on counterfeit pressed pills, like Adderall, Xanax, and Percocet, as well as the access of life-saving naloxone in schools and the community.

Participants at the event had the option to bring posters of their family members to honor their loved ones they have lost to fentanyl abuse.

CDC data has ranked North Carolina 4th in the nation in fentanyl-related deaths last year. North Carolina data also shows a combined 2,615 fentanyl deaths between 2013 and Sept. 2023.

For more information on Fentvic and to see any of their upcoming events throughout North Carolina, visit their website here.

Read the full article and watch the video on the WXII News 12 website.

Davidson County families work to fight fentanyl together

DAVIDSON COUNTY, N.C. (WGHP) โ€” Eight people in North Carolina die every day, because of fentanyl, according to the North Carolina Office of Chief Medical Examiner.

On Saturday, people who have lost someone to the deadly drug met other families, public officials, health advocates and law enforcement in Davidson County to work together to fight the fentanyl crisis.

โ€œWe want to educate people on this,โ€ said Mike Loomis, a founder of Race Against Drugs.

Mike and his wife, Lorie started Race Against Drugs to be a support for families, after they lost their son, James. โ€œYou canโ€™t get over something like that, it complete changes your life and we donโ€™t want another parent to lose their child to drugs laced with fentanyl,โ€ Lorie said.

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EBay will pay $59m settlement over pill presses sold on the site

– the kind used to make counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl

BY LINDSAY WHITEHURSTย ANDย THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 1, 2024 at 5:04 AM EST

The e-commerce giant eBay will pay $59 million in a settlement with the Justice Department over thousands of pill press machines sold on the platform, the Justice Department said Wednesday.

The machines can be used to manufacture counterfeit pills that look just like prescription pills but instead can be laced with substances like fentanyl, a synthetic opioid drug that is largely fueling the deadliest overdose crisis in U.S. history.

The company failed to verify buyersโ€™ identities and keep records required by law, and many people who bought pill presses onย eBayย have been prosecuted in connection with trafficking illegal counterfeit pills, the Justice Department said.

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‘Weโ€™re tired of telling parents that their children are dead due to fentanyl use’ | UCSO works to fight fentanyl crisis

Union County is working to get fentanyl test results back sooner.

MONROE, N.C. โ€” WCNC Charlotte is putting a face to the fentanyl crisis. 

Recent trends show it’s killing people who don’t even know they’re taking it. 

A deadly dose is as small as the size of Abraham Lincoln’s cheek on a penny. 

Now, theย Union County Sheriff’s Officeย is working to crack down on the drug, which is greatly impacting families.

โ€œHe just really had a special heart,” Union County resident Linda Hibbets said.

Hibbets, raised her grandson, 18-year-old Brian Terrano. He grew up loving adventures, sports, and anything to do with Gatlinburg. After a trip there, the next morning he was supposed to go to school. 

โ€œI told my husband to help me get him off the bed, and I did CPR, Iโ€™m an RN, and I couldnโ€™t save my grandson and that was really hard,” Hibbets said. “Iโ€™ve saved others, but I couldnโ€™t save him, he was gone.โ€   

It’s a story UCSO Lieutenant James Maye has heard too often.ย 

Continue reading “‘Weโ€™re tired of telling parents that their children are dead due to fentanyl use’ | UCSO works to fight fentanyl crisis”

INSIDE LOOK: Union County crime labโ€™s crucial role in putting criminals behind bars quicker

UNION COUNTY, N.C. โ€” Union County is working to speed up justice with its crime lab and newly accredited FIELDS of evidence, which means faster results while putting criminals behind bars and getting innocent people out.

Channel 9โ€ฒs Hannah Goetz spoke with forensic chemists, crime scene investigators, and law enforcement officers on Thursday about the work they are doing, which is helping to cut back on the state labโ€™s backlog.

The digital forensic lab has equipment used to analyze things, such as text messages, which could lead to an arrest.

โ€œItโ€™s key for us to create a timeline of that victimโ€™s last hours and this room does a great job of providing us that,โ€ said Lt. James Maye.

The work in the digital forensic lab can help in cases of fentanyl poisoning to identify drug dealers.

โ€œThis evidence is used to determine which source provided the narcotics that ended the life of a victim,โ€ Maye said.

The crime labโ€™s most recent accreditation was in the fall of 2023, which allowed officials to process fingerprints and blood alcohol testing on-site.

The blood alcohol analysis, which could be crucial in a DWI arrest, starts there where vials are filled and prepped for testing.

โ€œThe alcohol thatโ€™s in the blood will slowly go into the air above the sample,โ€ said forensic chemist, Dayla Rich.

โ€œSo, you test not the blood, but the air that is coming out of it?โ€ Goetz asked.

โ€œCorrect,โ€ said Rich.

Running those tests in-house can provide results weeks or even months faster. Other local law enforcement agencies can use the lab too.

โ€œSheriff (Eddie) Cathey is encouraging everyone to bring us your phones, your blood, anything we can do to get criminals off the street bring it to us weโ€™ll take care of it,โ€ said Lt. Maye.

In the coming months, theyโ€™re hoping to be accredited in other fields of evidence analysis, including DNA, blood drug toxicology, and seized drugs.

The lab will not conduct autopsies on-site. That will be the responsibility of the regional medical examinerโ€™s office.

The Union County Sheriffโ€™s Office hopes to eventually do postmortem-blood-drug testing for death by distribution cases.

Read the full article and watch the video on the WSOC TV9 website.

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