The Columbus Dispatch

Former OSU football player arrested

- Bethany Bruner bbruner@dispatch.com @bethany_bruner

Aformer Ohio State wide receiver was arrested in the Linden neighborho­od Saturday after neighbors say he fired gunshots.

Corey D. Smith Jr., 26, had told Columbus police earlier he knew nothing about gunshots detected by the Shotspotte­r system.

Police had responded to the 1700 block of Cordell Avenue after receiving an alert from Shotspotte­r that shots had been fired in the area. They found two shell casings behind a home in the 1700 block of East 26th Avenue.

Smith, whose address was listed asbarberto­n, a suburb of Akron, said he had heard no shots andknew nothing, police said. Nearby residents, however, told officers later that Smithhad been firing a gun duringa party the night before.

Police had been to the homeprevio­usly to help the U.S. Marshals Service look for Smith, who was wanted on arrest warrants from the Akron area for aggravated robbery.

Police reviewed body-camera footage and determined that Smith was the person they had spoken with at the East 26th Avenue home. Surveillan­ce was conducted, and when SWAT officers arrived, Smith attempted to run away but was caught after a brief chase.

Smith was held on the Akron-area warrants; Columbus charges involving shooting a gun are pending. Smith played for the Buckeyes from 2014 to 2016.

Fentanyl, heroin and meth

Columbus police confiscate­d more than 45 grams of methamphet­amine during the search of a home on the Hilltop.

Police had a search warrant for a residence in the 1700 block of Union Avenue and arrived at 6:15 p.m. on March 12. They said the methamphet­amine seized has a street value of about $4,600. Police said they also found an undetermin­ed amount of heroin and a gun.

More than a dozen surveillan­ce cameras, some of which were pointed down an alley, also wereconfis­cated.

A 26-year-old woman was arrested on charges of drug possession.

In a search warrant served two days later at a home in Linden, police seized more than a pound and a half of fentanyl with a street value of more than $76,000.

The raid in the 1500 block of Genessee Avenue also resulted in the seizure of nearly 700 grams of heroin with a street value of more than $69,000, plus 43 grams of cocaine, 16 grams of marijuana and three semi-automatic firearms, police said.

Two milligrams of fentanyl is an average dosage that could prove fatal to humans, according to federal narcotics officials. The 763 grams recovered during the Thursday raid could kill 400,000 people.

A 61-year-old man was taken into custody and faces high-level felony charges.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States