Mexico Seizes 270 Kilograms of Suspected Fentanyl, About 14 Million Doses, in Colima Raid
Mexico’s Public Security Ministry says it seized about 270 kilograms of a substance believed to be fentanyl—both powder and pills—equivalent to roughly 14 million doses, during raids on a clandestine drug lab and warehouse in Villa de Alvarez, in the cartel‑plagued western state of Colima. Officials say six people were arrested, though they did not specify the date of the operation or estimate the street value, and noted that larger fentanyl hauls have occurred, including a 2024 bust that netted about a ton more. The seizure comes as President Donald Trump escalates criticism of Mexico’s anti‑cartel efforts even after the recent killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, using a Florida summit with right‑wing Latin American leaders to launch a 17‑country Americas Counter Cartel Coalition and claim cartels are “running Mexico.” In December, Trump formally classified fentanyl as a “weapon of mass destruction,” putting it in the same legal category as nuclear and chemical agents, while Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum counters that U.S.‑sourced guns are fueling cartel firepower and is pressing Washington to stop weapons trafficking south. Mexican forces have been raiding multiple clandestine labs in states such as Durango, Sinaloa and Michoacán in recent weeks, seizing tons of methamphetamine, precursor chemicals and equipment, underscoring a cross‑border drug economy that remains at the center of the U.S. overdose crisis and U.S.–Mexico political tensions.
📌 Key Facts
- Mexico’s Public Security Ministry reports seizing about 270 kilograms of suspected fentanyl in powder and pill form in Villa de Alvarez, Colima, equivalent to roughly 14 million doses.
- Six people were arrested in the operation targeting a clandestine drug lab and warehouse, though authorities did not specify when the raid occurred.
- The seizure is part of a broader Mexican crackdown on clandestine labs as President Trump labels fentanyl a ‘weapon of mass destruction’ and launches a 17‑country Americas Counter Cartel Coalition while criticizing Mexico’s anti‑cartel record.
- Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum argues U.S. firearms are driving cartel violence and urges Washington to curb gun flows across the border, highlighting diverging narratives over responsibility for the fentanyl and broader drug trade.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2024, opioid overdose death rates were highest among American Indian/Alaska Native people at 35.5 per 100,000, followed by Black people at 22.8 per 100,000 and White people at 17.5 per 100,000, with the number of deaths highest among White people (33,105), followed by Black people (10,202) and American Indian/Alaska Native people (845).
Opioid Overdose Deaths: National Trends and Variation by Demographics and States — KFF
Between 2020 and 2023, approximately 66-68% of firearms recovered in Mexico and successfully traced by the ATF originated in the United States, with specific yearly figures: 67.5% in 2020, 66.2% in 2021, 65.2% in 2022, and 68.2% in 2023.
Most fentanyl entering the United States is produced in clandestine laboratories in Mexico by Mexican transnational criminal organizations, using precursor chemicals primarily sourced from China, and is smuggled primarily through the Southwest Border, with significant seizures at ports of entry in California and Arizona.
Cartel violence in Mexico increases risks for migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border by diverting them to more perilous routes, with a study finding that heightened violence correlates with migrants choosing dangerous paths to avoid cartel-controlled areas.
New Study Charts How Cartel Violence Increases Risks for Migrants at U.S.-Mexico Border — University of California, Davis
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