Veteran: The Border Wall ‘Would Help Quite a Bit’ in Dealing with America’s Opioid Crisis

‘And this is not a one-stop shop to stop the flow of opioids over the border’

EXCERPT:

KILMEADE: "Now, what do you think the wall would do to stop this opioid crisis? Of course there’s no quick fix, but this would fix a lot. How?"
LeBLANC: "Good morning, guys. Thanks for having me."
EARHARDT: "Good morning."
LeBLANC: "Yes, this would help quite a bit, and this is not a one-stop shop to stop the flow of opioids over the border. What this does is stem the flow of opioids and it directs the flow towards areas where border patrol can more quickly interdict."
KILMEADE: "What states?"
LeBLANC: "It'd be along Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and parts of California. And the border patrol knows the areas where they want to build the wall, and they’ve told the President."

Video files
Full
Compact
Audio files
Full
Compact