(KNUE-FM) There is one thing that everyone in Texas can agree on, we don’t need people dealing drugs in the Lone Star State.

We are fortunate to have some fantastic law enforcement officers working hard daily to keep drugs off the streets, but we know there is still people dealing and using drugs here in Texas.

But according to KVUE, there is a new bill that has gotten approval from the Texas House that would toughen penalties on drug dealers through social media.


READ MORE: Woman Caught Smuggling Drugs with Daughter at Texas Border

READ MORE: East Texas Man Gets Life for Selling Meth and Marijuana


This Bill Comes After Four Teens Died

Lawmakers filed this bill after 14 teens near Dallas overdosed on counterfeit pills that contained fentanyl. Four of those teens died.

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Police Believe Cartels Were Involved

This overdose tragedy took place in 2023, but law enforcement believes the cartels were involved.

There is information regarding a cartel ring that was targeting students through online platforms.

Those platforms included Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and X.

How Would the Penalties Change for Drug Dealers?

Senate Bill 1833 would raise the penalty to the next highest category when any drug dealer is caught using social media to distribute drugs.

First degree felonies would add another five years to prison sentences and doubles any cash fines handed down during sentencing.

If this bill is passed into law, the change would take effect on September 1, 2025.

The law would also reclassify accidental overdoses including synthetic opioids as poisoning.

Dealing drugs is bad enough, but using social media to push illegal drugs is even worse.

As a Texas resident I truly hope this bill becomes a law and the consequence for dealing drugs online becomes more severe.

Country Stars Who've Overdosed on Drugs + Alcohol

Alcohol and drug abuse impacts between15 and 20 percent of the population, and country stars are no exception. A number of country stars are among the statistics who've overdosed on drugs or alcohol — and sadly, most did not survive.

Gallery Credit: Sterling Whitaker

America's Deadly Addictions: Fatal Overdoses by State

Using data from health policy research, polling, and news source KFF, Amethyst Recovery Center was able to determine which state had the most fatal overdoses in 2022. Using information from the US Census, they were then able to calculate the number of fatal overdoses per 100,000 people. Here's a look at America's Deadly Addictions: Fatal Overdoses by State, in order of least to most fatal overdoses.

Gallery Credit: Scott Clow

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