Staggering amounts of fentanyl hit streets as the DEA watched and took no action, records show
The tallest building in downtown Albuquerque, N.M., which houses the U.S. attorney's office, is seen beyond a chain link fence on Friday, June 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan) 2026-06-22T04:08:37Z ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Even as it battled the deadliest drug epidemic in.
Expanded Context
Brimstone Report is tracking this as a curated politics brief. The source report from AP says: The tallest building in downtown Albuquerque, N.M., which houses the U.S. attorney's office, is seen beyond a chain link fence on Friday, June 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan) 2026-06-22T04:08:37Z ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Even as it battled the deadliest drug epidemic in.
This page is not original reporting. It gives readers the Brimstone view of the story: what is known from the attributed source, why the topic matters, and where to continue reading the original report.
At publication, this brief is anchored to a single attributed source. Readers should treat early details as provisional until additional reporting, official statements, or documents appear.
Why It Matters
Political developments can affect public policy, agencies, budgets, investigations, elections, and the legal process. The value is in tracking what changed and what remains unresolved.
Key Facts
- Primary source: AP
- Published: Jun 22, 2026, 7:53 AM UTC
- Coverage area: Politics
- Brimstone role: curated summary, explanation, and source attribution
- Topic signals: developing story metadata
Timeline
- Source published: Jun 22, 2026, 7:53 AM UTC
- Brimstone indexed: Added to the curated Brimstone feed and linked to related coverage.
- Next update to watch: Additional sourcing, official confirmation, court or agency records, or follow-up reporting.
Source Attribution
This Brimstone page summarizes and contextualizes a third-party report. Continue to the original publisher for full reporting, documents, quotes, and updates.
Read Original Source


