Strong opioids are being sold in Mexican pharmacies without prescriptions and in English-labelled bottles. Photo: Deborah Bonello for VICE News.
“What did you say?” we asked.“Nothing,” he shrugged, looking off into the distance. “I didn’t say nothing.”He was likely speaking on behalf of the producers of the groups behind the pills being sold through Mexico’s pharmacies to unsuspecting American tourists: the Sinaloa and New Generation Jalisco Cartels. When we tested the fake “Oxycodone”, “Hydrocodone” or “Percocet”, as well as pills mimicking Adderall, using Bunk Police test kits back at our hotel, our suspicions were confirmed. Of four fake Oxys we tested, two tested positive for fentanyl. Of six fake Adderall’s we tested, four tested positive for meth.Sales staff had fished those pills out of bottles marked with fake labels, as well as from clear plastic bags containing loose pills. Technically, the purchase of any opioids or benzos requires a special prescription issued by Mexico’s Health Ministry, according to the Federal Health Law. We saw this law flouted across the coast —only the major pharmacy chains refused to sell us the pills without a prescription.
Many of the pills crumbled easily, and resembled the Mexican Blue counterfeit pills being increasingly seized in the U.S. Photo: Deborah Bonello for VICE News.
Our findings are backed by other reporting on the U.S-Mexico border as well as a recent UCLA study. Tiny amounts of fentanyl can kill, especially those not expecting to consume the drug or those with a low tolerance for opioids. A number of cases in which pills bought by Americans in Mexico and taken home have caused fatal overdoses have been documented in the U.S.
Pharmacy infiltration
A Bunk Police fentanyl testing strip shows positive for fentanyl in a fake pill sold as "Hydrocodone" in a Mexican pharmacy. Photo: Deborah Bonello for VICE News.
No prescription needed
Soldiers and police are a constant presence in beach resorts such as Tulum and Playa Del Carmen, where drug-related violence has spiked in recent years. Photo by David GANNON / AFP) (Photo by DAVID GANNON/AFP via Getty Images.
Lack of regulation
"Oxycodone" and "Adderall" pills sold in Mexican pharmacies in resort towns around the coast. Many of the pills tested positive for fentanyl and meth. Photo: Deborah Bonello for VICE NEWS.
“It also creates an augmented threat to public health.”It’s likely that Americans are dying in Mexico from overdoses caused by these pills, but the lack of accurate registration of drug overdoses makes it hard to know. Mexico’s forensics system is overwhelmed by the country’s murder rate - bodies pile up at the morgue and toxicology reports determining drug deaths are rare. When drug overdoses occur, they are usually not registered as such on death certificates - opioid overdoses on the border tend to be registered as respiratory failure, according to Alfonso Chavez from the harm reduction center PrevenCasa in Tijuana that works with fentanyl users.
The idyllic island of Cozumel hosts pharmacies and shops that sell fake prescription pills to tourists. Photo: Photo by DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images.
