Attorney General Jackley Praises Presidential Signing of HALT Fentanyl Act

Attorney General Jackley Praises Presidential Signing of HALT Fentanyl Act

PIERRE, S.D. – South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley praises President Trump’s signing of the national HALT Fentanyl Act which the Attorney General says is a necessary step in dealing with the nation’s Fentanyl Crisis.

Attorney General Jackley was a guest Wednesday at the White House for the signing of the legislation which Congress passed last month. Attorney General Jackley had been one of 25 Attorneys General that urged passage of the legislation.

“Too many South Dakota families continue to suffer from the impacts of Fentanyl,” said Attorney General Jackley. “We need to aggressively address this crisis to save lives and better protect South Dakota communities.”

The HALT Fentanyl Act closes a loophole for copycat fentanyl which are lab-created drugs that are made to work around U.S. law. The copycats are often more harmful than prescription Fentanyl. The HALT Fentanyl Act permanently classifies illicit Fentanyl knockoffs, known as Fentanyl-related substances, as Schedule I substances.

So far this year, from January to June, there has been 140 Fentanyl arrests made in South Dakota and 2.221 pounds of Fentanyl seized. In all of 2024, there were 330 arrests made and 18.2 pounds seized.

Attorney General Jackley has been a strong advocate in the effort to fight Fentanyl at the state and local levels. He has increased strengthening the state penalties for Fentanyl possession.

The Attorney General also partnered with Emily’s Hope, along with the South Dakota Departments of Social Services and Health, to distribute 20,000 naloxone kits to prevent overdose deaths. The distribution of these kits is funded by the South Dakota Attorney General’s South Dakota Opioid Settlement and supplied by TEVA Pharmaceuticals.

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Senator Mike Rounds WEEKLY ROUND[S] UP: July 7-13, 2025

Senator Mike Rounds WEEKLY ROUND[S] UP: July 7-13, 2025

It was a busy week in DC, particularly for those of us who serve on the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC). We passed our committee version of the Fiscal Year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA. This is our annual defense bill that authorizes funding for military programs, as well as military members and their families. This year, I’m particularly pleased to have authorized additional funding for Ellsworth Air Force Base as well as the B-21 program. This legislation will now head to the full Senate for consideration. Read more about the NDAA and the rest of my week in my Weekly Round[s] Up:

South Dakota groups I met with: South Dakota United Way; Stuart Rice, Vice President of the Dakotas Chapter of Sons of the American Revolution; South Dakota members of the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen’s Association; and South Dakota members of the National Association for the Deaf.

South Dakota towns represented: Eagle Butte, Lower Brule, Pierre, Pine Ridge, Rapid City, Sioux Falls and Yankton.

Other meetings: John Doyle, CEO of Cape; and Binalf Andualem, Ethiopia’s Ambassador to the United States.

I spoke at an event with Punchbowl News to discuss financial services policy. I also attended our Senate Prayer Breakfast, where Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina was our speaker.

NDAA: As I mentioned, we were glad to secure many wins for South Dakota in this year’s NDAA, including authorizing $378 million for construction projects at Ellsworth Air Force Base to prepare for bed down of the B-21 Raider stealth bomber, $28 million for the Watertown Army National Guard vehicle maintenance facility and $3.4 billion for procurement of B-21 aircraft. The NDAA also authorizes funding to support a 3.8 percent raise for military members. Read more about this year’s NDAA and a full list of my provisions here.

Appropriations Markup: I also attended a markup in the Appropriations Committee to discuss and debate three of our twelve spending bills that we’re working to get passed before the end of the Fiscal Year. A markup is an important part of the legislative process and the first step in passing our appropriations bills.

This is my first year serving on the Appropriations committee and as such, my first time working directly on Appropriations legislation before it hits the full Senate. I look forward to continuing to work with my colleagues on the committee to get these bills passed before October 1.

Hearings and briefings: I attended one closed hearing and one closed briefing as part of my work on the Select Committee on Intelligence.

Legislation introduced: This past week, I introduced the Reducing Homelessness Through Program Reform Act, legislation to cut red tape and create local solutions for addressing homelessness. Despite record levels of federal funding, homelessness continues to rise. It’s clear that a one-size-fits-all approach isn’t working. The challenges we face in South Dakota are not the same as those in California or New York. This legislation takes a conservative approach by shifting power back to the states and communities closest to the problem. This commonsense bill cuts red tape and enables local leaders to deliver faster, more effective and more appropriate solutions for the people they serve. Read more here.

Votes taken: 11 – all of these are on nominees to executive branch positions at the Departments of Energy and Transportation, as well as the Small Business Administration and the Office of Personnel Management. We also took a procedural vote to advance the nomination of a federal judge in Tennessee.

My staff in South Dakota visited: Aberdeen, Beresford, Brookings, De Smet, Faulkton, Garretson, Hartford, Huron and Watertown.

Steps taken: 44,083 steps or 20.12 miles.

Video of the week: KOTA TV in Rapid City did a story this past week on bringing a tribal law enforcement training center to the Dakotas, which I have long advocated for:

July 2025 FEC Report: Justin McNeal for Congress still living on borrowed cash

The only reason to note this is for anecdotal purposes, as there are rumors that McNeal may enter a contest from the hard right.

And I’m sure that will go as well as his 2 – count them TWO – non-starter congressional races. First as an Indy-turned Republican, and then going back to Indy, screwing up those petitions too.

McNeal2q2025 by Pat Powers on Scribd

Not much to see here.  Of the 50k he loaned his race, he spent $3408.12 in the last quarter, mainly going to GOP Lincoln Day dinners like he’s running for something.

And is he? If you look at the expenditures..

Maybe he’s trying to tell everyone something without saying it out loud?

2Q FEC Reports for not-so Independent Senate Candidate Brian Bengs; $78k raised, $60k spent, $16k cash on hand

BrianBengsIndy_2qFEC by Pat Powers on Scribd

This is interesting. Independent Senate Candidate Brian Bengs almost raised $80 grand in his first quarter of fundraising. Of course, it only cost him $59k to do it, but you have to start somewhere.

Even more interesting is the fact there is a Democrat in the race, Julian Beaudion, yet Bengs is raising money using Democrat fundraising platform ActBlue according to the report. I can’t imagine state dems would be happy about that with Bengs sniping cash out from under him. It also looks like he’s using Dem software firm NGP VAN Inc, who bills itself as the “leading technology provider to democratic and progressive political campaigns and organizations.” Who will Beaudion be using, because I would venture that’s who he would hire as well.

So… Bengs is supposed to be running as an Independent? Yet uses Democrat candidate infrastructure and organizations to rase money and organize?

And the actual Democrat candidate Julian Beaudion does not appear to have raised anything yet?

How does that work?

July 2025 FEC Report: Rounds for Senate – $517k raised, $196k spent, $2.5M cash on hand

Rounds_FEC 2025 2 Quarter by Pat Powers on Scribd

South Dakota’s junior Senator Mike Rounds snuck up on us and had a good quarter fundraising for his 2026 election race, brining in over half-a-million in the second quarter of fundraising this year.

Against $196,560.13 in total disbursements, Rounds for Senate raised a total of $517,658.40 providing him $2,503,177.56 in seed money for the 2026 election, making it that much tougher for any challengers to gain purchase in South Dakota.

Not that they’re going to against a popular Senator and former Governor.

This doesn’t count any money Rounds has raised through his Peter Norbeck PAC, which will report later, but had around $350k after the 2024 election.

Dusty Johnson Victory Committee, Dakota Leadership PAC add to Dusty Johnson’s fundraising totals

Dusty Johnson’s fundraising is on fire this cycle, as his affiliated committees post high numbers from supporters in the run up to his recent announcement for Governor.

The Dusty Johnson Victory Committee just slayed at fundraising, as they reported $607,405 in receipts, bringing forward $713,074.22 cash on hand at the end of the cycle – showing roughly 900,000 raised in the last three months (on the federal side).

Dusty Johnson Victory Committee July 2025 by Pat Powers on Scribd

Congressman Johnson’s Leadership PAC, the appropriately titled Dakota Leadership PAC is not due to make a filing until the end of July.

July 2025 FEC Report: Friends of Thune – $805k raised, $373k spent, $16.2 M cash on hand.

The Senate’s Majority Leader, South Dakota’s senior Senator John Thune continues his dominance in fundraising in the latest FEC Report:

July 2025 Thune FEC by Pat Powers on Scribd

Senate Majority Leader Thune reports $805,298.08 raised between transfers, interest, and people donating to his campaign against $372,846.61 spent, which – if you’re majority leader as he is – spending more on the political end of things is unavoidable as you work hard to get Republicans elected.

After all is said and done, Senator Thune leaves the quarter with $16,234,546.82 cash on hand in his main campaign account.  I think that gets the job done.

Friends of Dusty Johnson’s July FEC Report: $302k raised, $211k spent, $6M cash on hand!

Dusty July 2025 FEC by Pat Powers on Scribd

Congressman Dusty Johnson has A LOT of cash on hand as he moves into raising money for his Gubernatorial race, versus the Congressional race. But that Congressional account sure has a lot on hand.

In the past quarter, Dusty raised a total of $301,956.61 against $211,332.86 spent. Providing him a cash balance of $5,995,554.28 left over to conduct political activity with. Not a bad nest egg for other things.