Mexican drug traffickers are utilizing Facebook, TikTok and YouTube to flood the United States as DEA seizes 1,500 pounds of fentanyl and 8 million fake pills tied to dozens of overdose deaths
- Drug Enforcement Administration agents discovered Mexican cartels are using social media to mass distribute fentanyl and fake prescription pills
- From September 29 to December 14, agents seized 1,500 pounds of fentanyl, over 8 million fake pills and arrested 776 traffickers
- The drugs were tied to 46 overdoses and 32 overdose deaths across the country
- 76 cases revealed that drug traffickers used Tik Tok, Instagram, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Snapchat and YouTube to hawk their drugs
- DEA operations in 2021 have led to the seizure of 20.4 million fake prescriptions pills laced with fentanyl - enough to kill every American
Mexican drug traffickers have been turning to social media sites like Facebook, TikTok and Snapchat to peddle massive quantities of fentanyl and fake prescription pills across the United States that have been linked to dozens of overdose deaths.
'Mexican criminal drug networks are harnessing the perfect drug trafficking tool: social media applications that are available on every smartphone,' DEA administrator Anne Milgram said during a press conference Thursday.
'They are using these platforms to flood our country with fentanyl. The ease with which drug dealers can operate on social media and other popular smartphone apps is fueling our nation's unprecedented overdose pandemic.'
The DEA's three-and-a-half month investigation led to the seizure of more that 1,500 pounds of fentanyl and over 8 million fake pills that were linked to 46 overdoses.
Between September 29 and December 14, four out of 10 counterfeit prescription pills that were seized in every state of the country nearly resembled authentic Oxycotin, Percocet, Vicodin, Adderall and Xanax and contained at least two milligrams of fentanyl - considered deadly by the DEA.

Between September 29 and December 14, DEA agents seized 1,500 pounds of fentanyl, over 8 million fake pills and arrested 776 traffickers

A Drug Enforcement Administration operation from September 29 to December 14 led agents to more than 1,500 pounds of fentanyl and over 8 million fake pills that had been smuggled from Mexico by cartels and distributed across the United States. Drug traffickers used social media networks to push pills that resembled Oxycotin, Percocet, Vicodin, Adderall and Xanax and laced with fentanyl. Pictured is an authentic Xanax pill

Pictured is a counterfeit Xanax pill mass produced by Mexican cartels. The DEA has confiscated 20.4 million fake prescriptions pills in 2021

A recent DEA investigation found that Mexican cartels used social media to hawk fentanyl and fake prescription pills
DEA agents made 776 arrests and seized 288 weapons.
The DEA discovered that 76 cases that were investigated were linked to drug smugglers who set up anonymous accounts on Tik Tok, Instagram, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Snapchat and YouTube to push pills that were laced with fentanyl.
As many as 32 of those cases were tied to prominent Mexican drug cartels.
DEA investigators reported 34 cases with drug trafficking activities in Snapchat, 28 via Facebook Messenger and 14 on Instagram. Agents also registered 10 drug network activity cases on Facebook and two apiece on TikTok and YouTube.
The agency also decoded emojis that were used by drug dealers to advertise fake prescription medicines laced with fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, marijuana and other illegal substances.


Mexican cartels, according to the DEA, mass produced fake versions that are laced with fentanyl and smuggled into the United States. A three and a half month operation revealed 46 people suffered overdoses and another 36 died from overdoses


Front (left) and back (right) parts of a fake Oxycodone seized by the DEA

Counterfeit prescription pills seized by the DEA from drug traffickers linked to Mexican cartels

DEA recorded 776 arrests and seized 288 weapons during its three and a half month operation
The agency has confiscated 20.4 million fake prescriptions pills this year that Mexican cartels mass produced with chemicals that were and continued to be obtained from China, before the pills were smuggled and distributed throughout the United States, the DEA said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control and, more than 100,000 drug overdose deaths were reported over the last year. At least 64 percent of the deaths were tied to synthetic opioids, including fentanyl.
In March, the DEA released its 2020 National Drug Threat Assessment, showing that Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán's old Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel were the top two criminal organizations in Mexico distributing drugs, including fentanyl, to the United States.
At the time, the DEA warned that Mexican cartels - specifically the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, were ramping up production of wholesale quantities of fentanyl in both powder and pill forms, as the United States struggled with the opioid epidemic.