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$12 million in drugs seized in 'heroin packaging mill' bust in Queens

Around 86 pounds of suspected heroin and 1,000 fentanyl pills were taken in the bust in New York City this week, the DEA and others said.
Image: Over 86 Pounds of Suspected Heroin, 1,000 Fentanyl Pills and $200,000 Cash Seized in Ridgewood, Queens
A photo released by the Drug Enforcement Administration shows what it says are heroin glassines and packaging materials found in a Queens, N.Y., apartment.DEA

Police took down a "large-scale heroin-packaging mill" in New York City this week and seized suspected drugs worth an estimated $12 million, authorities said Wednesday.

Monday's bust in Queens involved a man accused of overseeing the packaging operation and three women accused of working for him, the Drug Enforcement Administration said in a statement.

Around 86 pounds, or 39 kilograms, of what is believed to be heroin and 1,000 suspected fentanyl pills were seized, officials said. Lab tests were pending, the DEA said.

Luis Martinez, who is accused of running the operation out of his apartment, faces charges of operating as a major trafficker and other counts. He and the three women were arraigned Tuesday night, officials said. It was not immediately clear whether they had attorneys.

They were arrested Monday afternoon after Martinez left the apartment carrying a backpack with $200,000, officials said. Inside the apartment, police found the three women and the drug packaging operation, according to the DEA.

Authorities from several agencies in involved in the bust said it would save lives. Opioid addiction and overdose deaths have been called a nationwide crisis.

"This drug den contained nearly $12 million dollars' worth of narcotics and was like an opioid landmine capable of dispersing hundreds of thousands of heroin doses throughout Northeast," Ray Donovan, the DEA's special agent in charge for New York, said in a statement.

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More than 81,000 people died from overdoses involving drugs of all kinds in the U.S. in the 12 months that ended in May 2020, the most ever recorded in a 12-month span, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said late last year.

The CDC said synthetic opioids — mostly illicitly made fentanyl — appeared to be the primary driver of the increase in deaths.

Fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid that is cheaper than heroin, is sometimes mixed with heroin to make it more potent. People can be unaware that it has been added, which increases the risk of overdose, experts have said.