Title 21 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - SANCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO FOREIGN TRAFFICKERS OF ILLICIT SYNTHETIC OPIOIDS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - SANCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO FOREIGN OPIOID TRAFFICKERS › § 2311
The President must send regular reports to the right congressional committees and leaders that name foreign opioid traffickers, explain what has been done under the law, update on work with Mexico, China, and other countries, and say whether any senior Chinese anti‑narcotics, regulatory, law enforcement, intelligence, or customs officials have helped trafficking and should be named. If a new trafficker is found between reports, the President must send an extra report about that person. The President must tell the Treasury to focus first on people or companies tied to the People’s Republic of China that ship fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, fentanyl precursors (and precursors for analogues), pre‑precursors, or equipment used to make fentanyl or fentanyl‑laced counterfeit pills to Mexico or other countries involved in producing fentanyl for the United States. A “person of the People’s Republic of China” means either a Chinese citizen or a company under Chinese law or control. The prioritization must continue until the President certifies to Congress that China is no longer the main source. Reports should be unclassified and the unclassified part made public, but may include a classified annex. The law does not require naming anyone already sanctioned before the report date. In addition, the President must send a classified report about sanctions work, including personnel and resources used last fiscal year, background on newly named traffickers, actions taken or planned, and a strategy to find more traffickers. Reports are due not later than 180 days after December 20, 2019, and then yearly until December 31, 2030. The Director of National Intelligence or the Attorney General can block naming people if it would harm intelligence, endanger sources, jeopardize investigations, risk lives, or damage property; they must tell Congress and explain. Treasury, Justice, Defense, State, Homeland Security, and the Intelligence community must share needed information with the President and the Director of National Drug Control Policy.
Full Legal Text
Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 2311
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73