S-4446-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Ashley Moody (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would amend the Controlled Substances Import and Export Act to make it a federal crime to manufacture or distribute pill press machines, encapsulating machines, dies, punches, gelatin capsules, or related equipment and chemicals when the person knows or intends that the equipment will be used to make a controlled substance that will then be illegally imported into the United States. It would establish extraterritorial jurisdiction over such conduct, meaning it applies even when the activity occurs outside U.S. borders. It would set maximum prison sentences of up to 8 years for standard violations, up to 15 years for large-scale operations (over 1,000 kg of chemicals or more than 100 machines), and up to 20 years when List I chemicals are involved, and would direct the U.S. Sentencing Commission to update federal sentencing guidelines accordingly.
Who benefits
Law enforcement agencies that gain new statutory tools to prosecute overseas suppliers of pill press equipment used in fentanyl and other synthetic drug manufacturing. Communities and families affected by synthetic opioid overdoses, particularly those involving counterfeit pills. Legitimate pharmaceutical manufacturers who compete against counterfeit drug producers. Emergency responders and public health systems strained by drug overdose caseloads. Customs and border protection personnel who gain clearer legal authority to act on upstream supply chains.
Who is hurt
Legitimate overseas manufacturers and distributors of tableting and encapsulating equipment — industries with broad lawful uses in food, supplement, and pharmaceutical production — who may face legal uncertainty or compliance burdens if their equipment is diverted. Defendants prosecuted under the new extraterritorial provisions who may face limited access to U.S. legal counsel or due process protections. Defense attorneys and civil liberties advocates who may raise concerns about the breadth of the "reasonable cause to believe" knowledge standard. U.S. importers of industrial pharmaceutical equipment who may face heightened scrutiny.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that pill press machines are a critical upstream link in the fentanyl supply chain — the DEA has documented that the vast majority of fentanyl-related overdose deaths in the United States involve counterfeit pills pressed overseas, primarily in Mexico using equipment sourced from China. They contend that existing law targets the drugs themselves but leaves a gap for the manufacturing equipment, and that closing this gap by extending extraterritorial jurisdiction mirrors the approach already used for drug trafficking under 21 U.S.C. § 959. They further argue that the tiered sentencing structure — with higher penalties for large-scale operations — is carefully calibrated to focus prosecution on major suppliers rather than incidental actors.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's "reasonable cause to believe" knowledge standard is broad enough to ensnare legitimate equipment manufacturers and distributors who have no actual intent to facilitate drug production, potentially chilling lawful international commerce in widely used industrial machinery. They contend that extraterritorial criminal jurisdiction raises serious due process concerns when applied to foreign nationals operating entirely outside U.S. territory, and that enforcement will be practically limited to the rare cases where suspects enter U.S. jurisdiction — meaning the law may impose symbolic penalties without meaningfully disrupting overseas supply chains. They also argue that mandatory sentencing guideline revisions remove judicial discretion in cases where individual circumstances may warrant different treatment.