Thinknews
Apr 30, 2026

FBI Director: ‘We Seized Enough Fentanyl in 2025 to Kill 178 Million Americans’

FBI Director Kash Patel announced what he described as a major breakthrough in the federal government’s fight against fentanyl and transnational criminal organizations. The FBI director also revealed that opioid overdose deaths declined sharply over the past year.

“We seized enough fentanyl in 2025 to kill 178 MILLION Americans. Opioid overdose deaths from last year dropped — 20 points,” Patel said, underscoring the scale of the synthetic opioid threat facing the country while also crediting coordinated federal, state, and local enforcement efforts.

According to earlier 2025 FBI testimony, the bureau has significantly ramped up operations targeting cartels, gangs, and drug trafficking networks following executive orders issued January 20 directing federal agencies to pursue the “total elimination” of cartels and transnational criminal organizations operating in the United States.

In February, the State Department designated six cartels and four transnational gangs as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGTs). In response, the FBI launched a Counter Cartel Coordination Center to consolidate intelligence and operational capabilities.

Since January 20, 2025, the FBI reports:

  • Over 25,000 immigration-related arrests

  • 350 arrests of Tren de Aragua members

  • 195 arrests of MS-13 members

  • Seizure of 66,600 kilograms of cocaine

  • 6,675 kilograms of methamphetamine seized

  • 1,500 kilograms of fentanyl seized

In March, federal authorities apprehended one of the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted fugitives, MS-13 leader Francisco Javier Roman-Bardales, in Mexico.

FBI-led task forces now include more than 9,000 federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial law enforcement partners nationwide.

“We can’t do that unless we have great police partnerships,” Patel said. “Which is why I’ve embedded police officers here at HQ from around the country to make sure we have that connectivity.”

The fentanyl crisis has devastated communities across the country in recent years. Provisional data shows:

  • 2023: Approximately 72,776 fentanyl-related deaths (about 69% of all U.S. overdose deaths)

  • 2024: Approximately 48,422 deaths — a substantial drop from the prior year

  • Fentanyl remains the leading cause of death for Americans ages 18–45.

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