Press Release

ICYMI: In Op-Ed, Josh Stein Discusses Work With NC Families To Tackle Fentanyl Crisis & Turn “Pain Into Purpose”  

In a new op-ed published by Cardinal and Pine, Attorney General and Democratic nominee for Governor discusses his efforts to combat the fentanyl crisis and highlights the families who have motivated his work. 

Stein writes that North Carolina tragically has too many “young people whose lives ended too soon at the hands of one of the deadliest drugs our country has ever seen,” and too many “parents, siblings, spouses, and children who will never get their loved one back.” As Attorney General, Stein says, “I have dedicated myself to fighting the opioid and fentanyl crisis so that other families don’t have to experience this pain.” 

Attorney General Stein has taken a holistic approach to the fentanyl crisis, including pushing Congress to give Border Control $300 million to install equipment that detects fentanyl in vehicles entering the United States, convening a statewide Fentanyl Task Force to enhance coordination among local, state and federal law enforcement, and authorizing more than 670 wiretaps to help law enforcement investigate and break up drug trafficking networks. 

Stein has also led a bipartisan group of Attorneys General to hold big drug companies accountable for their role in creating and fueling the opioid crisis, winning more than $50 billion – including nearly $1.5 billion coming to North Carolina to fund addiction prevention, treatment, recovery, and harm reduction programs. He has also worked with Republican and Democratic lawmakers to pass legislation to make it easier for law enforcement to crack down on illegal drugs. 

In his op-ed, Stein writes that the work is far from over because “every life lost to fentanyl is one too many.” However, he remains motivated by the families afflicted by the fentanyl crisis, “who are turning their pain into purpose,” to work towards “bringing about the end of the fentanyl crisis in our lifetime.”

Read Attorney General’s op-ed here