Jacksonville has seen a significant drop in overdose-related deaths, halving from 472 in 2022 to 221 this year.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office says it’s making major progress in the fight against overdose deaths — pointing to new data showing a sharp decline over the last three years.
At a briefing Tuesday afternoon, Sheriff T.K. Waters said overdose deaths in Jacksonville have fallen from 472 cases in 2022 to 221 so far this year, a drop he attributes to targeted enforcement and community cooperation.
During the update, Waters issued a direct warning:
“If you’re a drug trafficker in Jacksonville, stay away from here. Don’t come here. We don’t want you here — and keep your poison out of our city.”
Waters said the agency is using a variety of tactics to disrupt drug networks; however, he declined to reveal details.
“There’s a lot of things I don’t wanna talk about because it keeps us being able to operate the way that we operate… a lot of undercovers and things like that,” Waters said.
Waters also said that overdose-related deaths are not concentrated in any single part of the city.
“Illegal drugs affect a lot of people all over — all over the map. No specific neighborhoods… this is the decrease, which is really good,” he said.
The sheriff also pointed to a reduction in gang or group-related murders, reporting just one such case so far this year.
“One murder is too many. We are encouraged by truly historical-related deaths. In 2025, narcotics investigators arrested 813 criminals, and we’ll only continue this work in 2026,” said Waters.
Waters emphasized that community tips remain a critical part of investigations. Anyone with information about illegal activity is urged to contact JSO.