Earlier this year, the Los Angeles Times found that pharmacies in northwest Mexico were selling counterfeit pills contaminated with methamphetamine, fentanyl, and other opioids. Now, following a four-month-long investigation, Connor Sheets and Keri Blakinger report that the problem is much more widespread than originally believed. Potentially deadly counterfeit pills are common in pharmacies across all of Mexico—nearly every Adderall pill the reporters purchased over the counter, for example, was a counterfeit laced with substances like methamphetamine. |