Federal agents have removed more than 57 million deadly doses of fentanyl from U.S. communities during a massive 30-day enforcement surge.
The operation, known as "Operation Fentanyl Free America Phase II," targeted transnational criminal organizations and their financial networks from Jan. 12 to Feb. 10. Nationwide, the DEA seized more than 4.7 million fentanyl pills, 2,300 pounds of fentanyl powder and led to over 3,000 arrests.
In New Jersey, the impact was significant. Special Agent in Charge Towanda R. Thorne-James of the DEA's New Jersey Field Division reported that local agents seized more than 46,000 fentanyl pills, 18 firearms, nearly $250,000 in drug proceeds and made over 37 arrests.
"Families across America are losing loved ones to the fentanyl being pushed by drug cartels that care only about making a profit," Thorne-James said. "We will continue to work to stop this threat and make saving lives our top priority."
The nationwide results highlight the industrial scale of synthetic drug manufacturing. In addition to fentanyl, Phase II resulted in the seizure of 26 million methamphetamine pills, 147,797 pounds of cocaine, 65,000 pounds of illicit marijuana and 1,500 firearms.
The operation also targeted the infrastructure of the drug trade, seizing 29 pill press machines used to disguise fentanyl as legitimate prescription medication. Notable seizures included a single bust in Chattanooga, Tennessee, that prevented 9 million lethal doses from hitting the streets, and a New York Task Force operation that removed 60,000 pills from a cartel-linked distributor.
The Fentanyl Free America initiative, which launched in late 2025, focuses on disrupting the supply chain while increasing public awareness of "fentanyl poisoning." This second phase showed a marked increase in activity compared to Phase I, with nearly 1,200 more arrests and a significant jump in seized methamphetamine and cocaine.
DEA officials stated that the investigation into these transnational networks is ongoing as they work to dismantle the labs and financial systems funding the cartels.