In this episode of The Opioid Matrix, host Michael Brown speaks with Ralph Ornelas, a 36-year veteran of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, about the domestic networks helping fuel America's fentanyl crisis.
Drawing on decades of experience in gang investigations, narcotics enforcement, and jail operations, Ornelas explains how groups like the Mexican Mafia, Crips, Bloods, and other domestic organizations have evolved far beyond street crime into sophisticated drug distribution networks. He also describes how jails and prisons can become control points for narcotics trafficking, and why corruption, policy, and reduced enforcement tools have made the problem harder to contain.
Together, they discuss the connection between cartel supply and domestic distribution, the role of gangs in moving fentanyl into U.S. communities, and the growing dangers posed by new substances being mixed with fentanyl, including xylazine and other synthetic additives. The conversation also explores the importance of education, interagency cooperation, and stronger prosecution strategies to disrupt these networks before more lives are lost.
This episode offers a sobering look at how the fentanyl crisis is no longer only a border issue or an overseas cartel issue. It is a deeply rooted domestic threat playing out in neighborhoods, schools, jails, and communities across the country.
Together, they explore:
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Views expressed in this material are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Rigaku Analytical Devices.
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