
Was Nicolas Maduro âfloodingâ the US with fentanyl, as White House claims?
Was Nicolas Maduro âfloodingâ the US with fentanyl, as White House claims? Trump administrationâs claim that abducted Venezuelan leader is behind gangs sending drugs to US do not stack up. A White House social media post misleadingly links deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro with the US fentanyl crisis. The X post includes a video highlighting parents who lost children to fentanyl overdoses thanking President Donald Trump for capturing Maduro. âAngel Families thank President Trump for saving lives & capturing Maduro - the kingpin flooding America with deadly fentanyl,â the White Houseâs January 5 X post said. âJustice is being served.â US troops abducted Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, at their Caracas home in the early hours of January 3. The two pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking charges on January 5 in New York federal court. The White House post isnât the first time the Trump administration has blamed Maduro for trafficking fentanyl to the US. Trump has cited the potent synthetic opioid that is responsible for most US drug overdose deaths to justify pressure on Venezuela in the months before Maduroâs capture. But neither Venezuela nor Maduro plays a role in smuggling fentanyl to the US. The majority of US fentanyl comes from Mexico and is made with chemicals from China, according to US government reports and drug policy experts. The White House did not respond to PolitiFactâs request for comment. Vice President JD Vance addressed fentanyl in a January 4 X post, the day before the White Houseâs post, saying cocaine is âthe main drug trafficked out of Venezuela,â and, âYes, a lot of fentanyl is coming out of Mexico. That continues to be a focus of our policy in Mexico and is a reason why President Trump shut the border on day one.â Drug experts previously told PolitiFact that Venezuela acts as a transit country for some cocaine trafficking in part because its neighbouring country, Colombia, is the worldâs main cocaine producer. However, most of the cocaine that enters the US doesnât go through Venezuela . Government reports say fentanyl does not come from Venezuela The Drug Enforcement Agencyâs annual National Drug Threat Assessment reports for years have pointed to Mexico and China as the countries responsible for illicit fentanyl in the US. None of the agencyâs reports from 2017 to 2025 list Venezuela as a fentanyl producer or trafficker. Most illicit fentanyl entered the US via the southern border at official ports of entry, and 83.5 percent of the smugglers in fiscal year 2024 were US citizens. âThere is no evidence of fentanyl or cocaine laced with fentanyl coming from Venezuela or anywhere else in South America,â David Smilde, a Tulane University sociologist who studies violence in Venezuela, told PolitiFact in September. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime World Drug Report also points to Mexico as the country of origin for the most fentanyl seized in the US. US fentanyl overdose deaths recently have dropped. From May 2024 to April 2025, the Centers...
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