It's the largest heroin seizure the state of New York has ever seen, and the fourth-largest ever in the United States, according to a DEA press release. Jose A. Mercedes (aka "Hippie") and Yenci Cruz Francisco were arrested Sunday in the Bronx after a yearlong investigation by DEA agents, New York City Police Department investigators and state police detectives.
"The $50 million street value of the heroin in this case is a conservative estimate. To put it in perspective, this load was so large it carried the potential of supplying a dose of heroin to every man, woman and child in New York City," DEA Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget G. Brennan said in the release. "While this important seizure stopped a huge amount of heroin from flooding our city, it also highlights the critical need to intercept heroin before it ever reaches our region."
A court authorized wiretap investigation revealed that MERCEDES and his drug trafficking group received sizable shipments of heroin at least once a month from suppliers in Culiacán, Mexico, an area controlled by the Sinaloa Cartel. The organization is believed to have served as a main source of heroin for customers throughout the five boroughs, as well as Connecticut, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.Over the weekend, agents followed Mercedes and Cruz Francisco as they drove a Chevy Suburban to an industrial parking lot in Montville, New Jersey. There, the pair allegedly picked up a large drop of heroin. When they got back to New York, agents maintained surveillance until Sunday morning, when the pair left a Bronx apartment in separate vehicles.
They pulled Mercedes over in a Kia Sorrento, and the DEA alleges that "Several large bags containing a tan powdery substance were recovered from the front seat of the car and from a hidden compartment in the center console."
Cruz Francisco was stopped in the Suburban, where officers found a hidden compartment under the floor that contained 70 "rectangular shaped kilogram packages of heroin" labeled "Rolex," as well as $24,000 in cash.
Last month, the New York Daily News reported that heroin is making a big comeback on the East Coast. In New York City, fatal heroin overdoses have exceeded homicides over the past two years, and cops seized $300 million worth of heroin in 2014, according to the paper.
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