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AG Wilson warns of deadly new synthetic drug cychlorphine

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Summary

AG Wilson warns of deadly new synthetic drug cychlorphine

What changed

The South Carolina Attorney General's Office has issued a public safety advisory warning residents about cychlorphine, a newly identified synthetic opioid that poses significant overdose and death risks even in trace amounts. The drug is manufactured overseas, primarily in China, and trafficked into the United States by drug cartels. Its evolving chemical composition makes it difficult for traditional detection methods to identify, and it is often mixed into other substances without users' knowledge.

The advisory urges all South Carolinians to avoid unknown substances, recommends parents discuss the dangers of synthetic drugs with their children, and instructs law enforcement and first responders to exercise heightened caution due to incidental exposure risks. The Attorney General's Office will continue coordinating with state, local, and federal partners to combat trafficking and hold distributors accountable.

What to do next

  1. Avoid any unknown or illicit substances
  2. Report suspicious drug activity to local law enforcement
  3. Seek immediate help for substance abuse

Archived snapshot

Apr 9, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

APR 08, 2026

PUBLIC SAFETY ADVISORY: Attorney General Alan Wilson warns public about deadly new synthetic drug

(COLUMBIA, S.C.) - The South Carolina Attorney General’s Office is alerting the public and law enforcement to the emergence of a dangerous new synthetic opioid, known as cychlorphine, recently identified in South Carolina.

Synthetic opioids like this are often manufactured overseas, including in China, and trafficked into the United States by drug cartels. They are designed to be more potent, more addictive, and more difficult to detect. In many cases, they are mixed into other substances without the user’s knowledge, turning any use into a potentially deadly gamble.

Attorney General Alan Wilson issued the following statement:

“This is poison, plain and simple. We are seeing foreign adversaries and drug cartels working together to flood our communities with these deadly substances. They don’t care who they kill. Their goal is profit, and the cost is American lives. Parents need to understand how serious this is and talk to their kids now, because one mistake, one exposure, can be fatal. We will use every tool at our disposal to stop this and protect South Carolina families.”

Cychlorphine poses a serious threat to public safety. Even trace amounts can result in overdose or death, and its evolving chemical composition makes it harder for traditional detection methods to identify.

The Attorney General’s Office urges all South Carolinians to take immediate precautions:

  • Avoid any unknown or illicit substances
  • Parents: talk to your children about the dangers of synthetic drugs and the reality that a single exposure could be fatal
  • Report suspicious activity to local law enforcement
  • Seek help immediately if you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse Law enforcement and first responders should exercise heightened caution, as even incidental exposure may carry serious risks.

The Attorney General’s Office will continue working with state, local, and federal partners to combat the flow of these drugs, hold traffickers accountable, and keep this poison out of our communities.

Public safety remains our top priority.

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For media inquiries please contact Robert Kittle, [email protected] or 803-734-3670

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
SC AG
Published
April 8th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Law enforcement Healthcare providers
Industry sector
3254 Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
Activity scope
Drug trafficking enforcement Public safety warnings Substance abuse prevention
Geographic scope
US-SC US-SC

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Criminal Justice Pharmaceuticals Consumer Protection

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