Investigating the Fort Bragg Cartel
109 Soldiers Dead. Only Four of Them Overseas.
Between 2020 and 2021, 109 soldiers assigned to Fort Bragg died. Only four of those deaths occurred in overseas combat. All the rest took place stateside. Rolling Stone Murders. Overdoses. Suicides. The military filed them under “non-combat deaths” and moved on.
America’s largest military base was killing its own soldiers faster than any enemy could.
This isn’t a story about bad apples. It’s a story about a factory. One that takes in patriotic young people, trains them in violence, deploys them repeatedly, prescribes them opioids, teaches them the drug trade, then abandons them to die. Investigative journalist Seth Harp spent five years documenting this story. What he found was the Fort Bragg Cartel.
From Patriot to Dealer: The System That Built Freddie Huff
The clearest window into how this system works isn’t William Lavigne, the Delta Force operator found executed on a Fort Bragg training range in December 2020. It’s the man investigators immediately suspected in his death: Freddie Wayne Huff II.
Former cop. Former DEA agent. By 2020, one of the largest cocaine traffickers on the East Coast.
Huff’s career trajectory is not an anomaly. It’s a logical outcome. Over 13 years in law enforcement he reportedly seized over $9 million in drug money, and when he joined the DEA’s El Paso Intelligence Center he learned everything about the drug trade: the routes, the players, the smuggling methods, every hole in the system. Then his dying mentor told him the quiet part out loud. “What you think you’re doing is noble. But they want it here. You’re a pawn. Everything you’re doing is in vain.”
Not long after, Huff was fired for pulling over a drunk driver who happened to be a major donor to the North Carolina governor. The official pretext was selling an old pair of state-issued boots on eBay for $0.99. The most successful cop on the East Coast, fired for a $0.99 eBay listing. If you search police boots on eBay right now you’ll find hundreds of pairs sold by active and former officers nationwide.
The government took his job, his pension, his identity. So Huff applied his training to the other side. He already knew where every hole in the system was because he’d spent 13 years plugging them. By 2016 he was trafficking 50 to 100 kilos of cocaine across the border every seven days through a partnership with Las Zetas, Mexico’s most militarily sophisticated cartel. Over a million dollars a week.
His distribution network? Fort Bragg soldiers. Special operators with firsthand knowledge of drug networks from protecting poppy fields in Afghanistan, unparalleled access to military vehicles and security clearances, and the tactical training to sell drugs in situations that would kill an average civilian.
[INTERNAL LINK OPPORTUNITY: link to the Hell’s Angels philosophy essay when discussing how systems produce criminals through the same logic they claim to fight]
The Machine That Made Them
To understand why Fort Bragg soldiers were lining up to work for a cartel, you have to understand what Fort Bragg did to them first.
By 2007, Afghanistan was producing 93% of the world’s non-pharmaceutical opiates. Wikipedia That number didn’t exist before the US invasion. The Taliban had nearly eradicated poppy cultivation by 2001 through religious conviction and a desire for international legitimacy. Then American soldiers arrived, needed the warlords who controlled the poppy trade to fight the insurgency, and the fields came back. Fort Bragg special operators found themselves in an impossible position: fighting a counterinsurgency while protecting the very drug networks fueling the global heroin trade.
They came home broken by that contradiction. PTSD. Traumatic brain injuries. Chronic pain. And opioid prescriptions. Between 2001 and 2009, opioid prescriptions in the military quadrupled, with service members prescribed at rates significantly higher than civilians. The department responsible for overseeing all of this was, per a 2024 GAO report, understaffed by 30%, with no accurate data collection standards and incomplete personnel information. Nobody was tracking how many prescriptions each soldier was receiving from different providers. Nobody was watching the totals add up.
When the prescriptions weren’t enough, soldiers reached out to their networks. The same military colleagues selling drugs could hook them up with a path to sell themselves. A single Freddie Huff cocaine run could net a soldier’s entire annual salary. These are people who survived IEDs and Taliban ambushes. Selling to their Fort Bragg colleagues wasn’t even the most dangerous thing they’d done that week.
Hannah Arendt watched Adolf Eichmann’s trial and was struck not by his monstrousness but by his sheer mediocrity. He was a bureaucrat who never stopped to ask whether his job was good for the human condition. He was just following orders. Lavigne, Huff, the 13 other Fort Bragg soldiers later confirmed as part of Huff’s distribution network, they’re all Eichmann. Ordinary people processed through a system that normalized atrocity, never given the tools to think beyond it. Prosecuting individuals ensures the cycle repeats. The machine keeps running.
This Is What Foucault Warned Us About
Michel Foucault argued that modern state power doesn’t announce itself like a king ordering an execution. It operates through optimization and management. The state decides who lives and who dies based on their value to the system.
Fort Bragg is a perfect case study. The military protected William Lavigne through failed drug tests, a bar fight, a domestic violence case, and a murder, because indicting a Delta Force operator meant admitting Fort Bragg had a problem. It was only when Lavigne became a liability too large to contain that he ended up executed alongside Timothy Dumas on a training range, and the military wasted no time framing both deaths as an isolated incident committed by a 20-year-old civilian named Kenneth Quick. All court documents remain sealed. No one is asking who benefited.
The dead soldiers’ families have had their life insurance policies revoked. Rolling Stone The wives insist their husbands had no drug habits until they were stationed in Fayetteville. The system made them. The system broke them. The system is still running.
The war on terror and the opioid crisis aren’t two separate problems. They’re one system with two faces. Both enrich the powerful while destroying the vulnerable. Both run on lies. And both are designed to continue indefinitely.
If Seth Harp hadn’t spent five years on this story, the Fort Bragg Cartel would have stayed exactly where Fort Bragg intended: buried.
Sources
Books
Harp, Seth. The Fort Bragg Cartel: Drug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces. PublicAffairs, 2024.
Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press, 1963.
Journalism
Harp, Seth. “These Kids Are Dying: Inside the Overdose Crisis Sweeping Fort Bragg.” Rolling Stone, 2022. https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/inside-the-overdose-crisis-sweeping-fort-bragg-1396298/
Harp, Seth. “Exclusive: Army Files Charges in Mysterious Fort Bragg Beheading Case.” Rolling Stone, 2022. https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/ftbragg-army-beheading-charges-filed-1283450/
Harp, Seth. “Mission Impossible.” Harper’s Magazine, October 2025. https://harpers.org/archive/2025/10/mission-impossible-seth-harp-trump-military-parade/
Scott, Peter. “Pipe Hitters.” The Baffler. https://thebaffler.com/latest/pipe-hitters-scott
Lutz, Catherine. Homefront: A Military City and the American Twentieth Century. Beacon Press, 2002.
“The Rot at Fort Bragg.” The Nation. https://www.thenation.com/article/society/rot-fort-bragg/
WRAL Investigates. “From 2020 to 2021, Suicides and Drugs Killed Fort Bragg Soldiers at Higher Rate Than Combat.” https://www.wral.com/story/from-2020-2021-suicides-drugs-kill-fort-bragg-soldiers-at-higher-rate-than-combat-training-and-training-deaths/20510635/
Academic and Government Sources
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Afghanistan Opium Survey 2007. UNODC, 2007.
Wikipedia. “Opium Production in Afghanistan.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opium_production_in_Afghanistan
U.S. Government Accountability Office. Special Operations Forces: Observations on Oversight Staffing. GAO Report, 2024.
Book Reviews and Additional Sources
Washington Independent Review of Books. “The Fort Bragg Cartel: Drug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces.” https://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/
Kirkus Reviews. “The Fort Bragg Cartel.” https://www.kirkusreviews.com/
The Literary Compass. “The Fort Bragg Cartel: Drug Trafficking and Murder in the Special Forces.” https://theliterarycompass.com/
Academic Theory
Foucault, Michel. “Society Must Be Defended”: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1975 to 1976. Picador, 2003.