This week a federal grand jury in Tacoma indicted 24 people, most from Washington state, accused of trafficking drugs and weapons in multiple states. Federal authorities say many members of the drug ring have ties to a white supremacist prison gang.
Authorities from the FBI, Department of Justice, DEA, and local police departments announced the drug bust on Monday in Tacoma. Nick Brown, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Washington, said the investigation into the drug ring stretched nearly two years and involved more than a dozen law enforcement agencies in multiple states.
Officials say the group bought and sold hundreds of pounds of dangerous drugs including methamphetamine and fentanyl in states including Washington, Idaho, Alaska, and Arizona. Nearly two million doses of fentanyl were seized, authorities say.
“There was enough fentanyl seized — just fentanyl — to kill every single person in Tacoma, every single person in Seattle, and 500,000 more people,” Brown told KUOW in an interview.
Police also captured more than 230 guns in the process, which Brown said most were semi-automatic rifles bound for Mexico to be sold.