The Biden administration has not been transparent at all and continues to dodge the media’s questions on all fronts. In Florida, the Attorney General Ashley Moody now has to sue the Biden administration because they believe the administration is providing crack pipes to drug addicts and nobody will give them honest answers.
“In a lawsuit filed on Wednesday, Moody asked a federal court to compel the Justice Department and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to comply with outstanding Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for documentation related to possible federal grant funds used to promote drug use through Safe Smoking Kits,” in a report from Fox News.
According to reports, the crack pipes are included in kits along with various other inappropriate items that are then distributed to addicts under the guise of safe drug use.
It has been over a year since the Florida Attorney General’s office filed the FOIA requests and has received no answers which the administration is required by law to hand over.
In an interview with Fox News, Moody said “If Biden is using your tax dollars to buy crack pipes for drug addicts, you have the right to know.”
“Our country is in the grips of a drug overdose crisis, and the Biden administration is stonewalling our requests and keeping the public in the dark about so many misguided, reckless policies. We are taking them to court to get answers for the American people,” she said.
Reports from a few years ago uncovered that kits were being given to drug addicts funded by the federal government. The White House and main stream media outlets have denied these claims and even refuse to acknowledge that it could be happening.
More and more evidence shows that “smoking kits/supplies” were funded by the Department of Health and Human Services in fiscal year 2022 Harm Reduction Grant Program according to a report from the Washington Free Beacon.
A spokesperson from the agency is on record telling the Washington Free Beacon that using grant money to pay for supplies for addicts would make it safer for them to use “any illicit substance.”