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Fentanyl is a high-yield criminal business, but it kills and attracts investigative pressure.
Italy🏛️ Politics7 hr. ago

Fentanyl is a high-yield criminal business, but it kills and attracts investigative pressure.

The article discusses the growing interest of organized crime in fentanyl due to its high profitability and ease of transportation compared to cocaine. Procurator Nicola Gratteri of Naples explains that while fentanyl is becoming more attractive to criminals, the European market has not yet reached the scale seen in the United States. He highlights that fentanyl’s potency leads to high mortality rates and attracts significant investigative pressure, which complicates its distribution. Gratteri cautions against automatically blaming mafias for fentanyl trafficking, noting they often act as brokers or financiers rather than direct perpetrators. He also emphasizes that cocaine remains the dominant drug trade for mafias in Europe, though the landscape is becoming more fragmented.

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1 reports

Il Fatto Quotidiano logoIl Fatto QuotidianoIndependentCenter7 hr. ago
Fentanyl is a high-yield criminal business, but it kills and attracts investigative pressure.

The article discusses the growing interest of organized crime in fentanyl due to its high profitability and ease of transportation compared to cocaine. Procurator Nicola Gratteri of Naples explains that while fentanyl is becoming more attractive to criminals, the European market has not yet reached the scale seen in the United States. He highlights that fentanyl’s potency leads to high mortality rates and attracts significant investigative pressure, which complicates its distribution. Gratteri cautions against automatically blaming mafias for fentanyl trafficking, noting they often act as brokers or financiers rather than direct perpetrators. He also emphasizes that cocaine remains the dominant drug trade for mafias in Europe, though the landscape is becoming more fragmented.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced view by acknowledging both the increasing threat of fentanyl and the continued dominance of cocaine in the drug trade. It avoids taking a clear ideological stance, instead focusing on factual analysis and expert commentary. The framing does not strongly favor either a

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