Pam Bondi's Absurd Claim About Fentanyl Overdoses Epitomizes the Illogic of the War on Drugs
Even when they are less patently ridiculous, the metrics of success favored by government officials make little sense.

Attorney General Pam Bondi was widely mocked for bragging, during a Cabinet meeting this week, that the Trump administration had "saved…258 million lives" by intercepting shipments of illicit fentanyl. That risible claim went a step beyond the more usual drug-warrior talking points, which tend to focus on the quantity of drugs seized and their purported "street value." But none of these is a meaningful metric of success in the war on drugs, which ostensibly aims to reduce the harm caused by substance abuse but actually magnifies it, as reflected in Bondi's record as attorney general of Florida.
First a word about Bondi's math. During President Donald Trump's first 100 days in office, she said, the federal government had seized "more than 22 million fentanyl pills" and "3,400 kilos of fentanyl." According to the National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics, 2 milligrams of fentanyl is a potentially lethal dose, which means 3,400 kilograms (if pure) could theoretically kill 1.7 billion people. So one could argue that Bondi actually understated the Trump administration's accomplishment: It did not merely save 75 percent of the U.S. population; it saved the entire population five times over.
In February, the White House performed a similar calculation. Last fiscal year, it said, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) "apprehended more than 21,000 pounds of fentanyl at our borders, enough fentanyl to kill more than 4 billion people." The math checks out! Twenty-one thousand pounds is 9,525,440 grams, or about 4.8 billion lethal doses.
As Reason's Joe Lancaster notes, Bondi relied on a different method in arriving at her estimate, adjusting those 3,400 kilograms of fentanyl based on the "current purity level." She thus avoided claiming that the Trump administration had saved 1.7 billion American lives, which would have been even more patently ridiculous than claiming it had saved a mere 258 million.
Bondi's most obvious mistake is equating potential overdoses with actual overdoses: She assumes that 258 million opioid-naive people would each have consumed two milligrams of fentanyl in one sitting. But Bondi also erroneously assumes that seizing 3,400 kilograms of fentanyl is the same as reducing U.S. fentanyl consumption by that amount.
That is obviously not true. Prohibition allows drug traffickers to earn a hefty risk premium, which gives them a strong incentive to find ways around any barriers the government manages to erect. Given all the places where drugs can be produced and all the ways they can be smuggled, it is not possible to "cut off the flow," as politicians have been vainly promising to do for more than a century. The most they can realistically hope to accomplish through interdiction is higher retail prices resulting from increased costs imposed on drug traffickers.
That strategy is complicated by the fact that illegal drugs acquire most of their value close to the consumer. The cost of replacing destroyed crops and seized shipments is therefore relatively small, a tiny fraction of the "street value" trumpeted by law enforcement agencies. As you get closer to the retail level, the replacement cost rises, but the amount that can be seized at one time falls.
These challenges—which are compounded in the case of fentanyl, a highly potent drug that can be transported or shipped in small packages containing many doses—explain why interdiction never seems to have a significant and lasting impact on retail prices. From 1981 to 2012, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, the average, inflation-adjusted retail price for a pure gram of heroin fell by 86 percent. During the same period, the average retail price for cocaine and methamphetamine fell by 75 percent and 72 percent, respectively. In 2021, the Drug Enforcement Administration reported that methamphetamine's "purity and potency remain high while prices remain low," that "availability of cocaine throughout the United States remains steady," and that "availability and use of cheap and highly potent fentanyl has increased."
Bondi lives in a different world—one where the government seizes 3,400 kilograms of fentanyl and thereby reduces the supply available to consumers by that amount, preventing 258 million overdose deaths that otherwise would have occurred. Her claim not only beggars belief; it contradicts Trump's critique of the Biden administration's anti-drug record.
"Drugs are pouring in at levels never seen before," Trump said on Meet the Press in December. "They're just pouring in. We can't have open borders."
CBP fentanyl seizures rose from 7,330 pounds in 2020 to more than 25,000 pounds in 2023. That trend, Trump assumed, was not a triumph for interdiction. Rather, it signaled an increase in supply, which he blamed on President Joe Biden's weak border policies. That argument depended on the realistic assumption that "federal officials are only able to seize a fraction of the fentanyl smuggled across the southern border," as the White House conceded in February.
Now that Trump is in charge, however, a large volume of fentanyl seizures is a sign of success rather than failure, because seizing more fentanyl means preventing more overdoses. By Bondi's logic, the Biden administration saved 860 million American lives in 2023 alone.
Bondi's unjustified faith in the war on drugs blinds her to the ways in which prohibition makes drug use more dangerous. "Kids are dying every day because they're taking this junk laced with something else," she said during the Cabinet meeting. "They don't know what they're taking. They think they're buying a Tylenol or an Adderall [or] a Xanax, and it's laced with fentanyl, and they're dropping dead."
Prohibition is the reason drug users "don't know what they're taking." In a legal market, consumers know the contents and concentration of, say, a bottle of whiskey. In a black market, by contrast, drug composition is highly variable and unpredictable, which dramatically increases the risk of potentially fatal errors.
That problem is inherent in prohibition, and stepped-up enforcement of prohibition makes it worse. When she was Florida's attorney general, for example, Bondi garnered praise for cracking down on "pill mills." But that strategy predictably drove nonmedical opioid users toward black-market alternatives, replacing reliably dosed pharmaceuticals with products of unknown quality and purity. According to data from the Florida Department of Health, the age-adjusted rate of "deaths from drug poisoning" in that state nearly doubled during Bondi's eight years in office, and it continued rising after she left. If this is success, what would failure look like?
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How many lives did the Covid “vaccine “ save?
Around the world, easily into millions. These people would have 100% died had the vaccine been not widely available.
Cite?
I'm exactly in the danger zone for covid, bad ticker, crap lungs, 65 years old, got covid and was nasty sick for a week and got over it. I'm one of the people you say would 100% have died had the vaccine not been widely available yet I've never taken the vaccine. But being in this condition I probably won't be around much longer, and when I die I'm guessing you'll say "if only he'd taken the vaccine."
Bullshit, and you know it.
I'll take, "Completely Irrelevant Topic Mentioned by a Dipshit" for $1000, Ken.
This says more about you than dlam.
Yup. As stupid as Bondi.
Negative 35k?
A better question is, "how many fentanil deaths did the covid vaccine cause?"
Not sure why this was even covered. Opioids probably only kill mostly lower class white people, so not sure why Reason or Democrats even care about this.
Also, Sullum is a window licker.
Yes, Sullum is a worthless democrat retard.
Nope, Eric Bolling’s son was a very typical fentanyl death—young people that would become very productive members of society. A large percentage of fentanyl deaths are accidental ODs by young people believing they are popping a Xanax for a good night’s sleep. Kid Rock said he urges young musicians to not do cocaine because too much fentanyl is being put in it. Why?? Because fentanyl is highly addictive and so it makes every drug sell better because people will get addicted and buy more.
Kid Rock is a Republican and Bolling probably was too. What do they have to do with Democrats not caring about Americans dying of opioid overdoses for the last 4 years?
Does it hurt being that retarded?
Fentanyl deaths spiked in 2020…Biden actually decreased fentanyl deaths. But I agree, when garbage people like Ashtray Babbitt get Darwinned out of existence it improves life on earth.
I don't know why I debate the kids who ate glue in elementary school, but here you go:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/895945/fentanyl-overdose-deaths-us/
Me stating facts isn’t debating…did you mean you are masturbating??
Gotta cut Bondi a little slack. She’s still a little overwhelmed searching for the Epstein files.
Cool story bro.
Glad to see this sock back in action; I'm still pining for WABG.
Well apparently the only problem here is that she didn't say "potential deaths", which is obviously what she meant. Kind of like when democrats say getting rid of guns will save X lives. Oh wait, they expect us to take it very literally when they leave out the "potential" word...
Using Bondi's logic, banning the domestic production of bullets would save ten billion lives per year.
Sullum sounds just like Martha Raddatz to J.D. Vance. "it's only a "few" apartment complexes taken over by Tren de Aragua.." Where is your line in the sand Jake? For her apparently it was more then a "few" which was insane because in case you were wondering the number of complexes allowed to be taken over by Central American gangs is zero. Absurd claim or not, one more American death due fentanyl by someone who just wanted to get high is unacceptable.
People use the word "epitomize" when they mean "apotheosize".
The "War on Drugs" was lost by the first time Nixon said the words in 1971. It's been over 50 years and we still haven't learned. Politicians are spineless parasites who don't have the courage or decency to admit that interdiction just doesn't work. Legalization AND large scale commercial availability is the only viable answer. We admitted that prohibition didn't work for alcohol. Time to fess up for the rest of the illicit drug market.
I believed as you do even after spending 20 years in law enforcement. I was convinced that if the price fell and the purity increased, the social problems associated with drugs would disappear. I have changed my mind. In the years since Colorado and numerous other states and Territories legalized weed, the social problems associated with its use have multiplied. The violence has not abated, the number of users has ballooned. The effects on children are both more serious and more widespread. Legalization is making the problem worse.
How many stories do we need on this?
How many nothingburgers get multi day multistory treatment here, while HUGE libertarian concerns get no mention?
Oh, just the attorney general saying nonsense. The literal head of the justice department is a fool or a lickspittle. Not a nothingburger.
You obviously are new to the libertarian circuit. Critiquing the war on drugs is kind of their thing. I don't always agree with libertarians, but we have to hand it to them, they are consistent on this topic and have been leaders in the media.
Is it possible she meant 258,000 and misspoke? Or maybe she was counting all 57 states.
Sullum you do such an excellent job with drugs and guns etc, but destroy your credibility with you deranged Trump screeds.
He’s good on guns. At least once a quarter.
Speaking of overdoses, where is Sevo in this discussion?
We want to watch him take a pull on his glue bag and watch his eyeballs roll back up into his eye sockets as he flails around with his barbed wire wrapped broomstick attempting to assault fellow commenters.
New York's spectacular rise in violent crime occurred right after the draconian Rockefeller Drug Laws were enacted, and once they were finally repealed, violent crime rates dropped to levels not seen since the 1950s.
Bondi doesn't realize this, and her mathematically ability isn't at the third grade level. Trump is a genius compared to her.
The fentanil epidemic is partially bullshit.
A fatal blood level is around 20 ng/ml or higher depending on the individual.
Coroners are reporting post mortem blood tests as low as 0.5 ng/ml as caused by fentanil overdose. Just because it is present. Why? Well it could have contributed? Drug interactions and multiple drugs being present and all that. But 0.5? Seriously? The numbers of reported deaths is way overinflated.
Uh, no. We had a huge spike in ODs the last 15 years with the big spike coming in 2020…fentanyl is the culprit. So prior to fentanyl after the 1970s we had around 10k junkies die a year…like clockwork and no probably for the best. Then fentanyl deaths cannibalized heroin deaths around 2015…and then non junkies started dying from fentanyl. Junkies dying is Darwin…but the additional ODs were future productive members of society.
You make no sense. She is dead-on.
IF I am a drug lord murdering Mexican reading your post I start praying you are in charge. That can't be right.
I might stop reading you because of your unfair filtering of the facts
Beijing weighs fentanyl offer to US to start trade talks, WSJ reports
By Reuters
May 2, 2025
Fentanyl deaths spiked in 2020 when immigration was at record lows.
Wow! I've seen spin before, but this is spin on steroids! Or maybe on fentanyl.
So, Bondi is bragging on how much fentanyl she has prevented from making it onto the streets. Reason doesn't claim that her numbers are wrong, or that she didn't get those drugs off the street. Reason decides to take issue with how many lives she claims to have saved.
This 'report' does not make me question Bobi's judgement. It makes me question Reason's editorial policy, and who it is that controls that policy.
Slow news day at Reason, apparently.
Psst. Hey, kid, wanna buy a Tylenol?
So do you celebrate even one life saved or is that too much for your crabbed hearts. You , Jacob, remind me more and more of the hags that cheered as the tumbrels went past headed to the French Revolution guillotines.
So you’re under the impression that prohibitionist drug policies save lives?
Fentanyl is extremely dangerous…it should be banned. Now thanks to fentanyl the federal government could make opioids that are safe and properly dosed for pennies a pill that should be legal…but a bag of fentanyl is tantamount to a chemical weapon.
SBF, Fentanyl is a highly potent concentrated opiate, prohib-light. It is not “tantamount to a chemical weapon”. You did however get the rest of it right.
Given a safer source/substitute, people will take the substitute source/substance if priced reasonably over a black market.
Speaking for Normal People, how many lives do you have to take/destroy to save that one life you want to save, dummy?