Biden seeks to ramp up fight against drug traffickers with fresh
sanctions
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[December 16, 2021]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden signed two new executive orders intended to fight drug trafficking
and criminal networks on Wednesday, allowing for new sanctions on
Chinese companies trading ingredients of the opioid drug fentanyl and on
criminal gangs in Brazil, Mexico and Colombia.
The Biden administration is keen to show it is taking action on a
worsening U.S. opioid crisis that has fueled more than 100,000 U.S. drug
overdose deaths in the year to April 2021, a 28% increase from the same
period a year earlier, according to Centers for Disease Control data .
The U.S. Treasury said it had imposed sanctions on 25 entities and
individuals under new authorities granted under one of the executive
orders that allows the department to target those benefiting from
trafficking proceeds, regardless of any direct links to known drug
kingpins or cartels.
The sanctions on Chinese companies include Wuhan Yuancheng Gongchuang
Technology Co Ltd, which the Treasury says takes internet orders for
precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl, as well as other firms it
says are involved in the sale or transport of such chemicals.
In Brazil, Treasury imposed financial sanctions on Primeiro Comando Da
Capital, or PCC, which was born in the prisons of Sao Paulo in the early
1990s and is now considered Brazil's most powerful criminal
organization, helping to flood Europe with cocaine.
The addition of PCC to the Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctions
list follows moves in 2019 by the State Department and Department of
Homeland Security to quietly add suspected PCC members to a list of
organizations ineligible for a U.S. visa - a tactic used against
organized crime group members elsewhere.
The Treasury has also targeted a list of drug kingpins, cartels and
gangs in Mexico and Colombia, some of which were previously designated
under narrower sanctions authorities.
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President Joe Biden speaks during a holiday celebration for the
Democratic National Committee (DNC), at the Hotel Washington, in
Washington, U.S, December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File
Photo
To combat drug trafficking, the Treasury previously relied on the
1999 Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Act and an earlier 1995 executive
order that were based on more traditional cartel structures with
more easily identifiable leaders. The new structure allows the
Treasury to target a broader range of individuals, such as those who
knowingly receive property derived from drug trade.
"Today's drug trade no longer relies on crops that require vast
acreage, but instead on synthetic materials and precursor chemicals.
Cartels operate in a more diffuse and decentralized way, hindering
our ability to build comprehensive sanctions packages on drug
traffickers," one of the officials told reporters.
A second Biden executive order creates a new interagency council on
transnational organized crime to improve cooperation between the
departments of Justice, Defense, Homeland Security, Treasury and
State and the Office of National Intelligence.
It aims to improve communications between the intelligence and law
enforcement communities and the private sector to identify and
target criminal networks, according to an administration fact sheet.
(Reporting by David Lawder in WashingtonEditing by Heather Timmons,
Matthew Lewis and Rosalba O'Brien)
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