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US judge demands $18M payment from Chinese drug cartel for fatal fentanyl incident in Ohio.

A Landmark Ruling: Chinese Drug Cartel Ordered to Pay $18 Million in Fentanyl Overdose Case

A judge in a court in Ohio ​broke ⁢new ground and employed a new tool in the U.S.’s legal and government response to the deadly illicit fentanyl⁤ epidemic with her Aug.‌ 9 ruling that a Chinese drug⁢ cartel pay $18‍ million to the‌ family of a‍ man who fatally overdosed‌ on the drug⁤ that officials tracked back to the cartel.

Thomas ​“Tommy” Rauh was 37 years old and battling addiction when‍ he injected a lethal combination of heroin laced with fentanyl,⁣ a synthetic opioid, in 2015.

Mr. Rauh bought the drug from⁢ an Akron dealer who purchased it ⁤from ‍the Zheng drug cartel. The dealer was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

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Mr. Rauh’s father, James Rauh, ⁢filed the lawsuit ⁤in 2020 in Summit County Common Pleas Court in Akron, Ohio. Assisting the father in the ⁢lawsuit is the Cleveland-based international law firm Spangenberg Shipley & Liber,⁣ which is working on the case⁢ on ⁢a contingency basis.

In 2018, the U.S. ⁢Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a 43-count indictment against the ‍Zheng drug cartel.

Also, that year, officials traveled‍ to China to prosecute the Zhengs for murder. After‍ a three-day trial in ‍a Chinese court, it took court officials 15 minutes to let the Zhengs go free.

Mr. Rauh started down the path⁤ to the overdose that killed him by becoming addicted to the prescription painkillers he took to alleviate ⁤the pain he was suffering from dental work and a rollerblading accident.

“Tommy was a wonderful man; he had great abilities, a wonderful⁢ work ethic,” said his father in an interview with Fox News. “He loved ⁢his family, loved his friends. Just a wonderful guy.”

The father explained⁢ that his family is disposed to substance abuse and that “alcoholism runs in the family,⁤ in some respect.”

The ‍award broke down⁢ into $15 million for the wrongful death claim, $1 million for the survivorship⁣ claim, and $2 million for punitive damages.

Summit County Court Magistrate Judge Kandi S. O’Connor, who handed down⁣ the judgment, ‍said that a higher amount for punitive ⁢damages was warranted, but Ohio law prevented her from awarding⁤ any ⁢more in this area ‌than she did.

“After a review of the testimony ‌and evidence presented, this Court finds that Defendants⁢ are responsible and liable for the ⁤wrongful ‍death of Tommy Rauh. The Court further finds ​that ⁢the ​Defendants acted with conscious disregard and malice for their actions in relation to the wrongful death of ‍Rauh.”

National Threat

Fentanyl overdoses⁤ are the number one cause of death⁣ among Americans aged 18 through 49.

“This material is⁢ being brought into the United States in large quantities and being saved and stored in specific areas,” said James Rauh.⁣ “This is ​a national security threat of epic ‍proportions.”

While illicit fentanyl is shipped directly from China to the United States, most ‍of⁢ the drug is first ⁢made by cartels in Mexico from precursor ingredients originating from China.

The destructive capacity of ⁢fentanyl, which ⁣comes in liquid ⁣and powdered form, results in large‌ part from the drug being highly addictive and 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine.

With⁢ the potency being​ so high, even a‌ few specks of powdered fentanyl are enough to kill. Ingesting 2 milligrams of fentanyl can be‌ fatal, meaning 1 gram—about the same as a paper clip—could contain 500 lethal doses.

Authorities estimated in 2018 that ‍the Zheng drug cartel was producing 18 metric‍ tons ​of fentanyl a week.

Because fentanyl is so addictive, and such a tiny amount is so powerful, which makes it easy to conceal, drug dealers ‍mix⁣ it into other drugs they sell—including⁣ cocaine, marijuana, meth, and heroin—to‍ get their customers⁣ dependent and needing more which results in steady business,⁤ from those who survive.

Mock sizing of a potentially lethal dose of fentanyl on April 1, 2022. ​(John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

The Rauh family has channeled pain, anguish, and grief into combating the fentanyl scourge. The family founded Families Against Fentanyl, ⁤a nonprofit organization that pursues a national integrated campaign that includes⁢ government affairs and filing ‍of legislation, a petition, research, media relations, building an ⁤official coalition, and a billboard ‌campaign.

Families Against Fentanyl and its work have been featured on many‍ national news outlets.

Included in and⁢ fundamental to the work of Families Against Fentanyl is an effort to get fentanyl officially recognized by the federal ⁤government ‍as a “weapon of mass destruction,” a designation that the ‍organization says will “empower the U.S. to cut off the supply of this poison before”.



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