New and emerging drugs in state crime lab evidence: Quarter 4 2022 and Quarter 1 2023
What you will find on this page
- We show significant increases in crime lab submissions associated with a given county (or the whole state) testing positive for a given drug. We define a “significant increase” or jump as a quarterly count more than twice as large as seen in the average quarter over the prior 3 years.
- Crime lab cases rapidly decreased in Q1 2021 in direct response to a WA State Supreme Court decision and are likely to remain at much lower levels in the near future due to a WA State law set to expire in 2023.
- Over the past few years, the most prominent drug categories—featuring frequent notable jumps in many counties and/or statewide—have been fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, and novel benzodiazepines.
- More recently, fentanyl continues to comprise a large share of crime lab cases and fentanyl analogues have increased after becoming less prominent in 2020. Although total crime lab cases have greatly declined since the State v Blake decision, the number of cases testing positive for fentanyls appears to be higher than before Blake.
- Fentanyl and fentanyl analogue seizures increased in Eastern and Western Washington in the fourth quarter of 2022, despite the overall depressed count of drug-positive cases. Preliminary results indicate the continued spread of fentanyls in the first quarter of this year.
Data source, utility, and limitations
Crime lab data are a partial indicator of the supply of illegal drugs or prescription drugs that are controlled substances and suspected of being purchased or sold illegally. The data presented here are the results of the Washington State Patrol’s Crime Lab chemistry testing of samples submitted by law enforcement. While the data provide important insights into the supply of drugs, in part due to the use of precise chemical testing which indicates exactly which substance is present, they also have numerous important limitations that are described at the bottom of this page.
On this page, quarterly data provided by the Forensic Laboratory Services Bureau are used to identify drugs that appear to be increasing in law enforcement seizures in the 2 most recent quarters. (Data are preliminary and will change. For more on the data, see the details at the end of the page). We focus mainly on notable increases versus overall trends.
Emerging drugs in the fourth quarter of 2022
- Fentanyls: In the fourth quarter, 13 counties saw notable jumps in the number of crime lab cases testing positive for fentanyl itself, and 14 counties had jumps in cases positive for one or more analogue. Eight counties saw jumps in both. The quarter saw a new analogue arrive in Washington state, valerylfentanyl. The analogues include substances that are structurally and functionally similar to fentanyl, some of which may reflect incomplete synthesis of fentanyl by clandestine labs, and some of which are more potent than fentanyl itself.
- Depressants: Statewide, there were 9 cases of xylazine in the quarter, 7 of which were submitted along with evidence that tested positive for a fentanyl. Pierce County
saw 6 cases positive for substances in the class of depressants, including 2 cases with xylazine and 3 cases positive for one or more non-prescription benzodiazepine. Statewide, data so far show 37 cases positive for xylazine in 2022. Xylazine cases are undercounted because it is not a controlled substance and is inconsistently reported in crime lab data. Data from other sources, including medical examiners and opioid treatment programs, indicates that xylazine was present in a small percentage of cases in which fentanyls were identified in 2022.
- Douglas County
had 8 cases test positive for cannabis in the fourth quarter while Mason County
had 3.
- Pierce County
, with 8 cases, and Spokane County
, with 2, saw jumps in cases testing positive for cocaine.
Emerging drugs in the first quarter of 2023
- Fentanyls: Several counties saw jumps in either, or both, fentanyl itself or fentanyl analogues.
- Three counties saw notable increases in cases testing positive for one or more non-prescription benzodiazepine. These "designer" benzodiazepines often come in pills that imitate Xanax (alprazolam) pills. Some have the same color and appearance as Xanax and others are yellow or green bar-type pills, all containing such unapproved substances as flualprazolam, clonazolam, and etizolam, according to case reports from the King County Medical Examiner's Office.
Emerging trends?
Until the Blake decision, and even since then, three drug classes stood out in recent years for how often they have had increases: fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, and non-prescription benzodiazepines. Although, as noted, quarter is a rough representation of time, we present time trends by quarter to illustrate the changes in the presence of these substances in Washington state. Click on the Fentanyl series name in the legend to turn that series off and better see the other two. (Note that decreases in the recent quarters may be due to the incompleteness of the testing results, and may become quarter-over-quarter increases after updating.) All three of these drug classes may be sold as themselves, or as imitations of other substances. While Washington sees plenty of "street Xanax", we rarely see fentanyls mixed with black tar heroin or benzodiazepines.
State v. Blake: On February 25, 2021 the WA State Supreme Court essentially struck down the State’s felony drug possession law. Community reports from law enforcement and jails indicated an immediate decline in arrests and incarcerations for drug possession cases. On May 13, 2021 the Governor signed SB 5476, immediately making drug possession for adults a divertible offense for the first two cases with subsequent charges a misdemeanor. Law enforcement agencies are to refer divertible cases to local recovery navigator programs. The law expires in 2023 and unless the legislature acts, drug possession will revert to not being a criminal offense in WA State. Click on "Total cases" in the legend to see the statewide effect on crime lab cases positive for any drug.
Changing mix of benzodiazepines
The rise in "street Xanax" does not appear to be associated with an overall increase in all benzodiazepines. Instead, there appears to be a substitution effect: The first case of designer benzodiazepines identified in the state was one of the 268 total benzodiazepine cases in 2017. In 2019, illicit benzodiazepines comprised one quarter of the total, in 2020 the novel benzodiazepines were present in nearly one half, and in 2021 and 2022 they comprised more than half of all benzodiazepine-positive crime lab cases in Washington.
Prior editions of this page:
- Quarter 4, 2022
- Quarter 3, 2022
- Quarter 2, 2022
- Quarter 1, 2022
- Quarter 4, 2021
- Quarter 3, 2021
- Quarter 1, 2021
- Quarter 4, 2020
- Quarter 3, 2020
- Quarter 2, 2020
- Quarter 1, 2020
- Quarter 4, 2019
- Quarter 3, 2019
- Quarter 2, 2019
- Quarter 1, 2019
- Quarter 4, 2018
- Quarter 3, 2018
- Quarter 2, 2018
- Quarter 1, 2018
- Quarter 4, 2017
- Quarter 3, 2017
- Quarter 2, 2017
Data notes
In order to smooth the jumps, we compare the current quarter to the average quarter over the prior 3 years (a rolling 12-quarter comparison period). This means that an unusually low number of cases in the prior year no longer creates what looks like a substantial increase, which is particularly an issue with relatively rare drug categories and/or small counties.
As we describe elsewhere, there are many limitations of the data, including: county being an imperfect geographic unit to report the data; changes in law enforcement policy, practice and resources over time; and often substantial lags between when drugs were seized by law enforcement and when they were submitted to the lab and then further lags due to testing and reporting.
Truly new drugs present a challenge for crime lab testing: the need for a standard to which to compare the lab sample for identification. Cannabimimetics, non-prescription benzodiazepines, and novel psychoactive drugs (e.g., variations of MDMA), for example, are constantly changing. Often when a particular formulation gains enough notoriety--usually, being made illegal or causing a widely reported death--to warrant a standards company producing a chemical standard and a crime lab buying it, the formulation is changed. Thus, time trends in identified crime lab cases do not capture the initial rise of such a novel substance, but at best its peak and decline. Here we just focus on significant counts of new or rarely-before-seen substances.
In addition to the above issues with crime lab case counts, there are difficulties with reliably assigning a case to a particular quarter. First, the date entered as the received date for a particular case may be a few days after when the case actually arrived at the lab, which might put it into the next quarter. This date clearly comes after the actual arrest. Furthermore, testing takes time, and so results may not come until a subsequent quarter. Sometimes the initial request is for only some of the evidence from a case to be tested, and so the other items might be tested later at prosecutor request, adding further delay between submission and result.
In sum, "quarter" does not mean when law enforcement seized the drug, and counts will likely change. All data presented here are preliminary.
Please refer to the other crime lab data pages for other insight: