The Daily Courier

Fentanyl, carfentani­l seized in massive bust

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EDMONTON (CP) — Police say they have seized nearly $4 million worth of fentanyl pills in Edmonton as part of a massive bust they believe to be Canada’s largest of the powerful opioid.

An investigat­ion into a group believed to be traffickin­g a large amount of drugs began in March.

Officers seized $2 million in fentanyl pills at an Edmonton home more than three weeks ago and then searched three more homes in the city, plus another in nearby Sturgeon County. It was there that police and RCMP officers found a house that had been made into a fentanyl pill-processing lab.

“We know that this drug bust is very significan­t and we believe that we have saved a number of lives by taking all this fentanyl off the streets,” Staff Sgt. Karen Ockerman with the Edmonton Police Service’s drug and gang unit said Friday.

Ockerman said police aren’t naive enough to think there aren’t any other labs out there.

“But we think this had made a difference.”

The investigat­ion led to a total of 130,000 fentanyl pills being seized with an estimated street value of $3.9 million.

The bust also turned up four ounces of carfentani­l — an opioid 100 times more powerful than fentanyl — along with cocaine, methamphet­amine, cannabis extract, $1 million in cash and a pickup truck with a hidden compartmen­t.

Other items seized included four cement mixers small enough for a person to carry and two pill presses that together can make 10,000 pills an hour, said Const. Jason Wells, who works on an RCMP unit focused on clandestin­e laboratori­es.

It’s believed the cement mixers were used to mix the fentanyl with other agents and chemicals before making them into pills.

“We had never seen it before. Our colleagues around the country with other clandestin­e lab teams had never seen it before,” said Wells.

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