Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody (File)

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody Sounds Alarm On ‘Fake Xanax’

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody (File)
Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody (File)

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody is sounding the alarm on the rise in deaths nationwide from bromazolam, a potent benzodiazepine.

The drug is gaining popularity throughout the country and is reportedly being mixed with illicit fentanyl. Benzodiazepines are depressant drugs that produce sedation and feelings of relaxation.

According to the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education, bromazolam went from being present in only 1% of toxicology cases submitted to the National Medical Services Labs in 2021 to 13% in mid-2022.

Read: Pinellas Park Police SWAT Team Arrests Fentanyl Dealer While Executing Search Warrant

Side effects of bromazolam include loss of coordination, drowsiness, dizziness, respiratory depression, coma and death. 

“It is imperative that Floridians understand how dangerous bromazolam is on its own. It is also reportedly mixed with fentanyl, leading to adverse health conditions, overdoses and even deaths—including here in Florida. Please, never use an illicit substance. Just one pill can kill,” said Moody.

Bromazolam is an illicit substance within the category of novel benzodiazepines, also referred to as synthetic benzodiazepines.

Novel benzodiazepines are a classification of drugs that are not regulated by strict clinical guidelines the way that traditional benzodiazepines like Xanax and Valium are. Novel benzodiazepines have similar depressant effects to prescribed benzodiazepines but can be more potent and unpredictable.

According to the CFSRE, bromazolam made up just 4% of novel benzodiazepines in circulation in 2021. The CFSRE estimate that bromazolam’s presence rose to 73% of the supply of novel benzodiazepines through the first six months of 2023. 

Read: Florida Highway Patrol Seize 15,000 Deadly Fentanyl Pills After 100 MPH Pursuit Of ‘Cloned’ Vehicle

Bromazolam may be laced with fentanyl, making the drug even more potent and dangerous. The CFSRE reported that 83% of its samples tested positive for fentanyl. Other reports claim that naloxone, commonly used to reverse opioid overdose, is ineffective when dealing with bromazolam. 

From 2016-2018, law enforcement seizures of bromazolam never exceeded three per year nationwide. In 2023, that number rose to 2,913. Bromazolam use is rapidly increasing all across the country, leading to rises in overdose and death.

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