National Post

Guns and fentanyl-laced ‘ doses of death’ seized

- Liam Casey

• Thousands of fentanyl- laced pills described by police as “potential doses of death” and nearly two dozen guns were seized this week as officers arrested 18 people in an internatio­nal probe into organized crime, Ontario Provincial Police said Thursday.

Hundreds of offi c ers fanned out through parts of Ontario and Quebec as part of calculated, simultaneo­us raids on 22 locations on Wednesday, seizing pills containing the deadly opioid fentanyl and 23 firearms, OPP Deputy Commission­er Rick Barnum told a news conference.

“By dismantlin­g a criminal operation of this magnitude, we’ve literally prevented more than 11,000 doses of death of fentanyl and illegal guns from killing people in our communitie­s,” Barnum said.

The investigat­ion began by targeting multiple criminal groups traffickin­g firearms and drugs along the Highway 401 corridor between the Greater Toronto Area and Montreal, he said.

Investigat­ors then found that drugs were also being smuggled from Canada into the U. S., and DEA officials in Connecticu­t became involved, Barnum said.

The 18- month investigat­ion — known as Project Silkstone — also involved the RCMP, Quebec police, Montreal police and the Canada Border Services Agency.

Over the course of the probe, OPP say investigat­ors seized 11,500 pills containing fentanyl, eight kilograms of cocaine and 7.5 kilograms of ecstasy, among other drugs and drug equipment.

Barnum said the fentanyl products were being produced in Montreal and moved i nto Ontario. He said that was further proof fentanyl is not only being sold as an opioid, but also as a cutting agent — mostly for economic reasons.

“We have audio recordings of drug trafficker­s who callously admitted that the enormous profits that can be made from fentanyl far outweighs the potential overdose deaths that can come about as a result of them dealing these drugs,” Barnum said.

Fentanyl — a drug prescribed for chronic pain management — is roughly 100 times more potent than morphine and about 40 times stronger than heroin. It produces a drug high but also depresses respiratio­n, which can cause breathing to stop — a dose of just two milligrams of pure fentanyl can be lethal.

RCMP Supt. Ivan Verdurmen said selling fentanyl “has become one of the fastest growing industries in the illicit Canadian drug trade.”

“Makeshift drug labs are i ncreasing i n number in Canada and can be found just about anywhere: in rented homes, apartment, motel rooms, rental trucks, abandoned buildings, barns and garden sheds,” he said.

Commander Paul Verrault of Montreal police said much of the seized fentanyl products originated in his city, where they charged a 38- year- old man with three counts of traffickin­g the drug. From there, fentanyl would make its way into eastern Ontario and into Belleville, Ont., the Quinte area and the Toronto area.

Barnum said the drugs would be moved in all types of vehicles, some of which were seized in the raids, including a snowmobile.

Police infiltrate­d several criminal organizati­ons during the investigat­ion. A Hells Angels member was among those arrested, Barnum said.

The probe also netted a Service Ontario employee, police said, who was allegedly helping a Toronto man forge documents that included passports, driver’s licences and health cards.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An Ontario Provincial Police officer displays bags containing the deadly opioid fentanyl at a news conference in Vaughan, Ont., on Thursday. A total of 18 people were arrested in raids across Ontario and Quebec.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS An Ontario Provincial Police officer displays bags containing the deadly opioid fentanyl at a news conference in Vaughan, Ont., on Thursday. A total of 18 people were arrested in raids across Ontario and Quebec.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada