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Ohio sanctuary counties see greater increases in drug deaths than non-sanctuaries

Posted on 2/25/20 at 12:26 pm
Posted by Crimson Wraith
Member since Jan 2014
24745 posts
Posted on 2/25/20 at 12:26 pm
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The number of drug deaths in Franklin County, Ohio's most populous county, is so high that the coroner is discussing opening a second morgue to house all the decedents. What is going on in places like Franklin County?

Virginia pinned the blame for the drug crisis on three government policies in particular: government's overly zealous restrictions on prescription painkillers, weak deterrent against drug traffickers, and sanctuary cities that harbor those criminal aliens trafficking for the cartels. It's that last element that really shocked her as she got active on this issue and began digging into the data.

Kreiger, who has been pushing her state legislators to clamp down on sanctuary cities in Ohio, started a group called Parents Against Illicit Narcotics. She shared with me data showing that the sanctuary counties in Ohio experienced a 17% higher increase in drug overdoses from 2015 to 2017 than non-sanctuary cities.

The numbers are based on the non-age-adjusted deaths, according to data obtained from the Ohio Department of Health Statistics.

Overall, the combined increase in drug overdoses in Ohio's nine sanctuary counties was 74%. For comparison, the combined average increase in the non-sanctuary counties was 59.7%. In other words, the increase in sanctuary jurisdictions was 14% greater.

Next, Krieger selected non-sanctuary counties with identical population numbers and demographics to various sanctuary counties and noted how much milder the increase in drug death were comparatively.

It's truly remarkable. Both Clermont and Lake counties have about 200,000 people and are suburbs of major cities (Cincinnati and Cleveland, respectively). While Clermont's drug deaths were essentially unchanged, Lake's rose 95%.

The highest concentrations of drug deaths, particularly illicit fentanyl-related deaths, appear to be located in the larger urban areas of sanctuary cities and counties, spreading to the surrounding suburban and rural areas in the impact zones, with slowly diminishing death rates as the distance grows from the epicenters. The trafficking pattern appears to follow major Ohio highway corridors 75, 74, 71, 77, 70, 76, and 80/90 and their attached county highway routes.

Franklin County, the biggest sanctuary in Ohio, saw its overdose deaths increase 10% last year, even as other counties experienced a drop, thanks to the increased use of Narcan. And the numbers appear to be rising again this year.

Most of the deaths are from fentanyl, but Ohio is also one of the leading states in deaths from methamphetamine. Both drugs are being trafficked by the Mexican cartels and being distributed by criminal aliens protected by sanctuary cities, which is why Virginia considers herself an "angel mom," along with other Americans who lost family at the hands of illegal aliens.

When you hear of sanctuary cities, the media often sanitizes their actions by describing peaceful law-abiding immigrants. But those being protected from ICE's removal operations are the very people being arrested for crimes, and the most common crime is drug trafficking. That is your drug crisis right there.

The 23 drug task forces that combat drug trafficking in the Ohio High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area agency saw a 1,600% jump in meth seized from 2015 to 2019, according to the Cincinnati Inquirer. It was around that time when these Ohio counties became sanctuaries and refused to turn over illegal alien drug traffickers to ICE. When it comes to top-level trafficking for the cartels, it's obvious that the lion's share of those involved are here illegally.

The DEA's latest threat assessment report describes the trafficking in Ohio as follows:

Throughout Michigan and Ohio, Mexican DTOs are the primary sources of supply for cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine. Ties with Sinaloa and CJNG Cartel are apparent, with heavy presence in northeast Ohio. Narcotics are transported throughout the region by various means, most often via the mail, tractor trailers, and cars. TCOs supply local DTOs and violent neighborhood gangs. These DTOs are heavily armed, violent, and generally poly-drug traffickers, most often trafficking marijuana, cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, and prescription drugs.

Well, those are the types of people who find sanctuary in places like Columbus, Dayton, Cincinnati, and Cleveland.
Posted by Wtodd
Tampa, FL
Member since Oct 2013
67482 posts
Posted on 2/25/20 at 12:27 pm to
I can't imagine why this happens
Posted by cwill
Member since Jan 2005
54752 posts
Posted on 2/25/20 at 12:39 pm to
Sounds like a very credible, scientific study with lots of controls for all the myriad factors that could possibly intervene.
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