Dispelling a common myth about fentanyl as election workers get letters with traces of it

Emergency and law enforcement agencies respond to a possible hazardous material situation at the King County Elections office in Renton, Wash., on Nov. 8. Four county elections offices in Washington state were evacuated after they received envelopes containing suspicious powders — including two that field-tested positive for fentanyl — while workers were processing ballots from the Nov. 7 election.

The morning after Election Day, a county election worker in Washington state opened an envelope and found white powder. Election workers would later learn the envelope contained a typed threat: "end elections now."

The threat was unusual for Pierce County election officials, but it was one of multiple jurisdictions that received letters containing powder in recent days.

After Election Day Nov. 7, the FBI told election officials that law enforcement is investigating multiple letters containing suspicious substances that were mailed to election offices in California, Georgia, Oregon, Nevada and Washington.

"In at least four instances, preliminary tests of the suspicious substance indicated the presence of fentanyl," the Nov. 9 FBI notice said.

Linda Farmer, the Pierce County auditor, said her staff evacuated and returned to work in 2½ hours. "It was important to them to show democracy would not be deterred," Farmer said. She added that initial testing showed the substance her office received was baking soda, but the investigation continues.

The letters are part of a pattern of threats election workers have faced since the 2020 election, as some politicians and pundits have spread misinformation about how election workers do their jobs.

Some election offices now stock Narcan, a medicine that reverses overdoses from opioids such as fentanyl. However, merely touching fentanyl is not deadly.

Here’s what we know about the threats to election offices and the misinformation on fentanyl’s effects:

Letters sent to multiple states

Secretaries of state in WashingtonNevada and California confirmed this month that suspicious letters were sent or addressed to jurisdictions in their states.

Police in Washington’s King and Spokane counties said initial testing showed the letters contained traces of fentanyl.

King County election officials also received a letter during the August primary that had traces of fentanyl.

Authorities are investigating two letters in California that were intercepted before they reached election offices. A letter that arrived in Lane County, Oregon, is also under investigation.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said Nov. 10 on X, formerly Twitter, that law enforcement said a letter sent to Fulton County had been intercepted.

You cannot accidentally overdose by touching powdered fentanyl or being in a room with it

Receiving letters with unknown powders is threatening and scary. Some powders, such as anthrax, can sicken people exposed to it. However, toxicology experts say that’s not the case with fentanyl.

Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid, and its potency makes even a small amount of the drug lethal. However, fentanyl isn’t absorbed well by the skin; for fentanyl to physically affect the body, it must enter the bloodstream.

"It's really hard to get fentanyl into your body unless you directly snort it into your nose, directly drink it or inject it with a needle," said Robert Valuck, executive director of the Colorado Consortium for Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention at the University of Colorado.

People also cannot get sick by being in a room with powdered fentanyl. That’s because it doesn’t easily vaporize.

"People can snort (fentanyl), but this is intentional. It does not just get into the air," Dr. Ryan Marino, a toxicologist and emergency room physician who studies addiction at Case Western Reserve University, said in a February YouTube video. "To cause toxicity from breathing it in you would probably have to be in a wind tunnel with dunes of fentanyl around you."

Attacks on election officials threaten democracy

Many election officials have left their positions because of the threats to their safety.

Reports by advocacy groups show that a large percentage of election workers since 2020 are new in their jobs.

Election administration is a specialized field, and it takes time for people to learn procedures and equipment.

"Those with less experience are more prone to making small mistakes based on lack of knowledge — mistakes that, however innocuous, may be interpreted by hyper-partisans as malicious acts," said a September report by Issue One, a democracy-focused advocacy group.

Such mistakes can fuel misinformation, and that misinformation can trigger threats against election workers.

In 2020 and 2022, misinformation wrongly claimed that election workers and voting machines were flipping results.

But local election workers follow state laws and procedures that are designed to thwart voter fraud and include checks and balances to prevent workers from committing wrongdoing.

A Justice Department Election Threats Task Force formed in 2021 has filed charges in 14 cases as of August involving threats against election officials and secured nine convictions. In one case, an Iowa man left death threat voicemails for a local and state official in Arizona, threatening hangings and "torches and pitchforks." The man was sentenced to 2½ years in prison.

"Election officials are just doing their job — they are not putting their thumb on the scale; they are not in charge of what the results are," said Suzanne Almeida, state operations director at Common Cause, a group advocating for accessible voting. "They are incredibly dedicated public servants, especially in the face of these threats."

Our sources

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: PolitiFact: Can touching fentanyl cause an overdose?