Panicked by Fentanyl Analogs, Biden Embraces the Mandatory Minimums He Claims To Oppose
A House-approved bill that the president supports would expand the draconian penalties he supposedly wants to abolish.

When he ran for president in 2020, Joe Biden repudiated his long history of pushing harsh penalties for nonviolent drug offenses, calling for the abolition of mandatory minimum sentences. "Biden supports an end to mandatory minimums," his campaign said. "As president, he will work for the passage of legislation to repeal mandatory minimums at the federal level." But by endorsing a bill aimed at cracking down on fentanyl analogs, Biden is doing exactly the opposite.
The HALT Fentanyl Act, which the Republican-controlled House of Representatives approved today by a bipartisan 289–133 vote, would permanently add "fentanyl-related substances" (FRS) to Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, the most restrictive category. It defines an FRS as "any substance that is structurally related to fentanyl" and features one of five chemical alterations.
Under the bill's amendments, anyone caught with specified amounts of an FRS (except for federally approved researchers) will be subject to mandatory minimum sentences: five years for 10 grams or more of "a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount" of an FRS and 10 years for 100 grams or more. If "death or serious bodily injury results from the use of such substance," the mandatory minimum rises to 20 years.
In a "statement of administration policy" on Monday, the White House called the HALT Fentanyl Act's provisions "critical components of the Biden-Harris Administration's 2021 recommendations to Congress to combat the supply of illicit FRS and save lives." It urged Congress to approve "these critical measures," which it said would "improve public safety and save lives."
Twenty-one criminal justice reform organizations responded the next day with a letter to Biden that noted the bill's "entrenchment and expansion of mandatory minimums." They added:
You campaigned on a policy of ending mandatory minimums, but the HALT Fentanyl Act does the opposite. Punishing FRS through mandatory minimums is particularly egregious. This is because FRS are defined solely based on their molecular structure and without regard to their pharmacological effect. What this means is that, under the HALT Fentanyl Act, a person could be subject to harsh mandatory minimums for distributing harmless substances or even substances that reverse the effects of fentanyl overdose—just so long as those substances exhibit a particular molecular structure. Enacting a scheme that imposes mandatory 5- or 10-year sentences on people without regard to whether the substance they traffic is harmless or even helpful is, to say the least, inconsistent with the promise to end mandatory minimum sentencing.
Maritza Perez Medina, director of the Office of Federal Affairs at the Drug Policy Alliance, one of the groups that signed the letter, reiterated that complaint today. "The House seems intent on doubling down on the same failed strategies that got us here," she said, urging the Democrat-controlled Senate to reject the HALT Fentanyl Act. "While it may seem politically expedient to crack down on fentanyl and its analogues, history has shown us…this only creates further harm. Increasing criminal penalties and expanding the use of mandatory minimums, as this bill does, has never reduced the supply or demand of illicit drugs. Instead, it only exacerbates racial disparities in the criminal legal system and creates the conditions for an even more unknown, and more potent, drug supply to flourish."
Laura Pitter, deputy director of the U.S. program at Human Rights Watch, concurred. "It's sad to see lawmakers revert to over-criminalization once again when we have 50 years of evidence that the war on drugs has been an abject failure," she said. "A vote for this bill was a vote against evidence and science. We know that harsher criminal penalties have done nothing to address the overdose crisis, which has only gotten exponentially worse since Congress [temporarily scheduled fentanyl-related substances]. This would make that policy permanent and not only entrenches mandatory minimums but expand them. It will also undermine efforts by scientists to find solutions for problematic substance use and discourage people who [use] drugs who want help from seeking it because they will face harsh penalties."
The Sentencing Project's Liz Komar echoed that assessment. "By passing this bill, the House has signaled that Congress is entering a new carceral era," she said in an emailed statement. "The federal prison population has been on the rise since the beginning of the Biden administration after seven years of decline. The passage of the HALT Fentanyl Act would deepen that trend by doubling down on failed drug policies that prioritize prisons over drug treatment and overwhelmingly harm Black and Brown communities."
Komar reminded legislators that the punitive approach exemplified by Biden's Senate career as a hardline drug warrior has never been effective at reducing drug-related deaths. "If mandatory minimums and harsh sentences made communities safer, the overdose crisis would not have occurred," she said. "We urge the Senate to reject this bill and all expansions of mandatory minimums and reverse this punitive trend."
Rep. Frank Pallone Jr. (D–N.J.) voiced similar concerns. "This war on drugs—mandatory sentencing, incarcerate everybody—has not worked," he observed. "It didn't work on other drugs." That did not stop 74 of Pallone's fellow Democrats from voting for the HALT Fentanyl Act.
Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.), the lone Republican to vote against the bill, joined the chorus of criticism. "Instead of passing bills that expand the failed War on Drugs, we should be focusing on regaining operational control of the border," he wrote on Twitter. "One-size-fits-all mandatory minimum sentences are unwise, and this bill increases the number of defendants subject to them."
The "failed War on Drugs" has succeeded in one important respect: It has made drug use deadlier. The economic incentives created by prohibition and the pressure applied by attempts to enforce it gave us heroin instead of opium, fentanyl instead of heroin, highly variable black-market opioids instead of reliably dosed pharmaceuticals, fentanyl pressed into ersatz pain pills, drugs laced with unexpected adulterants, and the proliferation of the fentanyl analogs to which legislators are now responding in their usual ham-handed way.
The bipartisan support for the HALT Fentanyl Act shows that most politicians have learned nothing from more than a century of unintended but entirely predictable consequences like these. As drug-related deaths reach record levels not just despite but largely because of their fundamentally misguided efforts, they conclude that the answer is more of the same. Instead of the harm reduction that Biden supposedly supports, they seem bent on harm maximization, and Biden is joining their pernicious panic.
The position that critics like Perez Medina, Pitter, Komar, Pallone, and Massie are taking is the same as the position that Biden took during his presidential campaign, when he presented himself as a drug warrior who had seen the error of his draconian ways and embraced criminal justice reform. Now Biden is reverting to the pattern he established during his 36 years in the Senate, responding to a problem created by prohibition with more prohibition and embracing incarceration as a solution to the harm caused by the government's doomed and disastrous attempt to stop people from consuming psychoactive substances that politicians have deemed intolerable.
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Mandatory minimums for 3 crimes may be too low. But when you have career criminals with 50+ arrests. Maybe it is time to consider some type of minimum.
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No, it's time to get a prosecutor that actually prosecutes and seeks jail time for repeat offenders. If criminals were in jail, they wouldn't be reoffending, but a mandatory minimum or three-strikes law does nothing if the prosecutor won't use it.
Joe Biden is a drug warrior? Who'd of thunk it? Besides his entire history as a career politician, how could we know?
I know, right?
Of all of Biden's claims in 2020, his claim that he was a "changed man" from his previous tough-on-crime positions seemed like the biggest whopper. It was just intended to fool enough Team Blue voters into believing that he was "hip" with the current moment of criminal justice reform.
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Yet he took on a Stalin of a crime moron. Kamala.
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris on Wednesday said she disagrees with former Vice President Joe Biden’s assessment that the 1994 crime bill he pushed “did not generate mass incarceration.
"Upon being elected, I will give the United States Congress a hundred days to get their act together and have the courage to pass reasonable gun safety laws. If they fail to do it, then I will take executive action." —CNN Town Hall | April 22, 2019
"This war on drugs—mandatory sentencing, incarcerate everybody—has not worked" said the typical (fill in the name of your favorite 'war on drugs') moron.
The US has never 'fought' a war on drugs during its entire existence, i.e. this is what a real 'war on drugs' would look like, '....Singapore executed another man on Wednesday for a drug offense. Tangaraju Suppiah, after being convicted in 2018 of abetting the smuggling of 1.02 kilograms (2.2 pounds) of cannabis ...'
How much has that cut down on Singapore's drug trade? I'm betting that either nobody knows, or it's no more effective than our policies.
THE WAR ON DRUGS is alive for yet another fifty years. Billions spent to keep people from willingly put into the bodies something the government doesn't like.
Oh wait, should we include prohibition? Then it's 103 years. Yeah, we won that one, didn't we. Remind me again, how we ended the "War on Booze?" Hmm... it'll come to me... give me a minute...
how we ended the “War on Booze?
Budlights chick with dick ad?
With all due respect, that is a different kind of "war." And it doesn't involve jails or cops with guns.
How long before a guy can bring a 6 pack of bud lite to deer camp?
Depends on whether he's there to hunt deer or hunt bears.
If the government spends $200 billion on the cost/consequences of drug use per year (that's a low estimate) in terms of healthcare costs, mental health, homelessness, etc., then the government should be prepared to spend a large multiple of that on preventing drug use, since prevention is preferable to treatment. Currently, we aren't even enforcing drug laws against drug users; drug use is effectively decriminalized.
I would PREFER for the US government to stop socializing the cost and consequences of drug use so that we can spend $0 on the drug war. But you can't socialize the cost and legalize.
This is a perfect example of how simple government intervention yields just ridiculous debates.
We shouldn't be talking about mandatory minimums for Fentanyl, because fentanyl shouldn't even be an issue. It is only something we care about because the Obama administration, starting ~2010 started a war on prescription use of opioids. Everything- from Cartel entrenchment, to overdose deaths, to crime waves, to smuggling, to counterfeit prescriptions- has been a downstream effect of that issue.
The US is becoming that fat, obese guy who is going to a hundred doctors to manage his blood pressure, diabetes, muscle degeneration, gout and other maladies all because he can't get out and exercise.
It is only something we care about because the Obama administration, starting ~2010 started a war on prescription use of opioids. Everything- from Cartel entrenchment, to overdose deaths, to crime waves, to smuggling, to counterfeit prescriptions- has been a downstream effect of that issue.
This is the nasty part of this subject that gets overlooked all the time, and frankly it's annoying. We have been cracking down on legal drugs for some time in this country and it gets very schizophrenic support from the very people who claim to be against "the war on drugs".
My view on this whole subject has become far more nuanced over the years. I don't have the answer here, but I do kind of categorize this fight into the "you can 'liberalize' things to such an extent, that it causes a backlash which leads to less liberty overall" column.
I'm open to criticism of that position of mine, fwiw.
The problem is that even free and liberal use of drugs does cause secondary crim effects especially in regard to property theft. Talking about a single position without recognition of follow on effects is a futile discussion.
I've often advocated risers for crimes done in conjunction with drugs. DUI enhancers should occur when a crash occurs, not allow for pulling over on any suspicion. Same fordrug fueled thefts and assault. More than willing for a legalization trade for this enhancement.
You mostly get the secondary criminal effects if:
A) The drug itself makes people perform criminal acts.
B) The price of the drug is high enough that the user needs to steal to afford a dose.
Well, opioids generally make people calm and lethargic. And Chinese manufacturers until recently supplied carfentanil at under $3,000/kilogram, which works out to 0.3¢/milligram, where one milligram of carfentanil is approximately as potent as 5 grams of heroin.
I can easily come up with just one drug that fits A: alcohol.
Property theft is a small problem compared to the rest. Socialization of medical and disability costs via our insurance system is a much bigger problem.
The reason people think drugs are harmless is because they lack price signals. If your disability/unemployment/health insurance rates doubled or tripled the first time you touched Oxycodone, Ozempic, or Lipitor, the first time your BMI went above 25 or you are passed out in public, people would very quickly change how they live.
We have been cracking down on legal drugs for some time in this country and it gets very schizophrenic support from the very people who claim to be against “the war on drugs”.
Like who?
This is not entirely true. Many heavy users have self directed a transition to fentanyl due to cost and then believing it is a more immediate high.
Prescription opioids were/are way overprescribed in the US, and that is linked to the opioid epidemic. Opioids are primarily useful for temporary control of serious pain in the hospital. They are not needed for most other situations and cause more harm than good.
Yes, it is. But the reason is that doctors give pills for everything, lying to people about how medicine can fix the problems arising from their lifestyle choices. That is true for Ozempic as much as Oxycodone. And people don't see it because the costs for medications are socialized.
In a rational, free market, your insurance premiums would isntantly double the first time you take any of these medicines or your BMI goes over 25.
it only exacerbates racial disparities in the criminal legal system
by doubling down on failed drug policies that prioritize prisons over drug treatment and overwhelmingly harm Black and Brown communities."
To paraphrase Kanye: “Joe Biden hates black people”
But seriously, can we cut Biden some slack? He’s 80, he’s increasingly confused, ill-tempered and unsteady. Short-term memory loss is probably causing a return to earlier political positions such as this. And we can’t expect him to be 100% all the time, especially since he needs plenty of rest before another Presidential run. Give him some ice cream and help him comb his leg hair.
It's hard for me to criticize "Biden" for this policy shift, because Biden may not have even knowingly shifted his policy. He's being told to do this by a cadre of party insiders, advisers and zoomer interns. "Stand on the blue tape, Mr. President, and read from this card."
So his motto is, "The Buck Doesn't Stop Here?"
His motto is, “What does a guy have to do to get some more gawdamn applesauce? I'm the gawdamnned vice-president”.
They made sure to include Republicans so it is a safe criticism.
I forgot what it's called when you label something the exact opposite of what it actually is or actually does, either out of wishful thinking or for propaganda purposes to mislead your people. Either way the "HALT Fentanyl" bill is a perfect example. Nothing Congress can pass will even come close to halting Fentanyl. This is either magical thinking on their part or a cynical attempt to convince Americans that they're taking meaningful steps to control what Americans erroneously think is a problem while doing nothing meaningful except accumulating political power. It is the latest in a long string of such bills and the titles just keep getting sillier and sillier. That trick NEVER works. If it worked, you could eliminate world hunger by passing a law entitled the "End World Hunger" bill and end tyranny by passing the "End Global Despotism" law and end war by passing the "Eliminate Military Conflict" measure ... etc ... etc ... etc ...
Depends on what you mean by "controlling".
The libertarian approach: full legalization, free unlimited Fentanyl, elimination of all substance abuse support programs and insurance coverage, and enforcement of public nuisance laws would certainly "halt Fentanyl". But it will do so by killing off most recreational drug users, one way or another.
What it won't produce is a nation of happy, well-adjusted, high-functioning recreational drug users, which is the pipe dream left-libertarians have been trying to sell.
agree with you.
The libertarian approach is like the wealthy healthy guy telling the poverty-stricken disabled man to 'buck up'. Selfish.
You don't legalize the immoral. That was the 'libertarian' argument for promoting slavery "wherever people vote for it" Stephen Douglas
Biden is famous for doing nothing and crowing about it. THe Brady Bill, which he boasted his asss off about, was a zero.
This is also the man that said that Beto O'Rourke was the perfect man to take the gun problem in hand.
I don't actually read Sullum's screeds so I'll just comment based on the headline. I and others came here and patiently explained to Jacob back in 2016, when he was campaigning for Biden, that his favored candidate was an unreconstructed drug warrior. According to Sullum back then, Biden had seen the light and was ready to reschedule reefer and somehow ameliorate the damage done to hundreds of thousands of people he was instrumental in incarcerating. How's that working out Jacob? A better man would put down the Koch and shut the fuck up. But you're not that guy are you Jacob.
I have been reading Sullum for at least 2 decades and don't recall him campaigning for Biden, especially in 2016 when Biden didn't run.
He sure didn't have nice things to say about Biden in 2020.
The Case Against Biden: Joe Biden's Politics of Panic
https://reason.com/2020/10/03/the-case-against-biden-joe-bidens-politics-of-panic/
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Hmm, this is starting to sound reminiscent of the Crack/Cocaine Panic of the late 80's/early 90's, when everyone was running around shitting their pants about the scourge of crack cocaine destroying the inner cities.
And of course the Crack Panic led to the infamous 1994 Crime Bill (that Biden not just supported, but sponsored) that severely increased the penalties for crack cocaine and represented a major escalation in the War on Drugs.
So just when we thought liberty might actually be increasing with more liberalization of drug laws, with the movement to legalize marijuana along with some psychedelics, of course now we see this. Two steps forward one step back I suppose.
If you take everything into account, it's actually one step forward and two steps back.
++
This kind of dance can never last.
And like when we could no longer buy cold medicine without photo ID and putting our name and address on a government log during the meth epidemic.
Yup
I'll just leave this here in case someone forgot:
Joe Biden Tough on Crime
Don't we love him.
Dude spent 50 years supporting mandatory minimums - but you believed him when suddenly he said he reversed course?
Seriously?
You got exactly what you voted for.
Yes, but you get it reluctantly and strategically.
You know who else (ironically; Biden's running mate) did exactly the opposite of what he preached?
“Five years for 10 grams or more….”
Here in WA state a year or so ago, (the fenty panic was still ramping up) two illegals got pulled over with 150,000 fentanyl doses. The pills got confiscated. The illegals? Released, no bail.
Priorities, man.
Once a drug warrior, always a drug warrior.
I mean he picked an Attorney General for his VP.
It seems like fentanyl is the crack cocaine of the 2020s. Like crack cocaine the politicians and the media are pilling on spreading fear. President Biden is taking the easy route and going with the masses. But fentanyl is also smaller and more powerful, as so easier to smuggle. Trying to address the problem on the supply side is likely to have little results. The problem needs to be addressed on demand side and that means helping the addicted.
Ron Paul, the elder Paul, once asked, "if heroin was legal would you really start taking it? I would ask the average person the same question about fentanyl. Don't fear fentanyl and give into the dark side. Look to positive ways to address the problem.
except that fentanyl is infinitely more dangerous than cocaine
And that is just the reason that addressing the demand side is better. Prohibition leads to black market drugs of unknown potency. Better to have addicts getting a prescription with a known quantity of the medication and trying to get them to work toward lowering their need.
No, those are two problems and you are conflating them. Prescriptions are not the answer, and if they were, why are you not agitating for helping the normal citizen who pays out the ass for prescriptions like insulin. Makes you sound utopian and clueless.
There is NO perfect solution. Make a real war on drugs and at the worst the abusers taper off by attrition.
As you note there is not a perfect solution but there are better solutions. Trying to control the supply side is already expensive and a shows little success. I suggest focusing on the demand side. For the user that cannot quit get them on a known regulated dose, through prescription, and focus on getting them functional. Drop the profits from the black market and reduce expenses from the efforts to stop the black market.
Biden appears to have no moral compass. THere are a slew of things that ‘those in the middle ‘ won’t do but if it is in their face they might. Open a porn shop right down the street. Put more bars in town. Open a brothel in town…
THe moral issue was the one that the great Dorothy Day saw very clearly I want a society in which the common man can be a good man and not have to be heroic.
"Komar reminded legislators that the punitive approach exemplified by Biden's Senate career as a hardline drug warrior has never been effective at reducing drug-related deaths."
Prohibitionists don't WANT reduced deaths. They want those who disobey them to DIE. In the 1920's, they added increasingly deadly poisons to industrial alcohol. In the 1960's, they sprayed marijuana crops with poison. In the 1970's, they helped the AIDS epidemic along by doing all they could to deprive junkies of clean needles.
Well, Mark, at least we know that if a junkie dies from not having expensive diabetes medicine you will sleep well, Nitey, nite.
All l want is for folks to admit the obvious, he is lazy and he is stupid. WE have 50 years evidence before us.
Spend (our) money like a demon and say 'you are doing something"
This year, the Biden administration announced that the President has called on Congress to invest $46.1 billion for agencies overseen by the Office of National Drug Control Policy to tackle the nation’s illicit drug crisis.
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