logo
Massive drug bust in Jacksonville neighborhood uncovers enough fentanyl to kill 90,000

Massive drug bust in Jacksonville neighborhood uncovers enough fentanyl to kill 90,000

Yahooa day ago
A major drug bust in the Mixon Town neighborhood of Jacksonville has residents alarmed and authorities warning of the deadly reach of fentanyl in the community.
Police said the amount of fentanyl seized in the operation was enough to kill tens of thousands of people.
Action News Jax told you about the drug bust yesterday after JSO shared details via Facebook.
Four suspects were arrested during the raid on Clemente Drive: John Williams (44), Lorenzo Dukes (24), Abdul Robinson (30), and Katherine Rivera (40).
>>> STREAM ACTION NEWS JAX LIVE <<<
Investigators discovered a stockpile of drugs and weapons inside a single home. Among the narcotics recovered were over 180 grams of fentanyl—equivalent to more than 90,000 potentially lethal doses—along with cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana, and six firearms.
The bust has shaken nearby families, many of whom say they were unaware such activity was happening so close to home.
'I didn't know anything about that,' said Jane Doe, a mother who recently moved to the neighborhood.
'I think it's a good thing. You know, I'm new to this community, so the fact that there'll be less drugs around here—that's going to make it look like people aren't all on drugs.'
[DOWNLOAD: Free Action News Jax app for alerts as news breaks]
Doe, like many other parents in the area, expressed concern for the safety of children living nearby.
'We raise a lot of children around here,' she said. 'We care about what they will be in the future and what they are around.'
The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office says the bust is part of a broader effort to curb drug trafficking in residential neighborhoods, particularly those involving fentanyl—a synthetic opioid driving overdose deaths across the country.
Residents said they hope this latest arrest sends a clear message: drugs will not be tolerated in their community.
[SIGN UP: Action News Jax Daily Headlines Newsletter]
Click here to download the free Action News Jax news and weather apps, click here to download the Action News Jax Now app for your smart TV and click here to stream Action News Jax live.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Speed driver Chris Raschke dies attempting to set the land speed record during Utah racing event
Speed driver Chris Raschke dies attempting to set the land speed record during Utah racing event

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Speed driver Chris Raschke dies attempting to set the land speed record during Utah racing event

A speed driver died while trying to break a record during the Bonneville Speed Week event in Utah on Sunday. Chris Raschke, 60, was driving at 283 miles per hour while trying to set a land speed record at Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats. Unfortunately, he lost control of his vehicle two and a half miles into his run, which led to his passing, according to reports. Medical staff quickly acted on the scene before Raschke succumbed to his injuries. In a statement from the Southern California Timing Association, they revealed that the cause of the incident was still under investigation. "At approximately 3:03 p.m. Mountain Time today, driver Chris Raschke was attempting a speed record and lost control of his land speed vehicle at approximately the 2 1/2 mile," The SCTA stated. "Chris was treated by medical professionals at the scene. Unfortunately, Chris passed away from his injuries." Raschke was part of the Speed Demon team out of Ventura, California and drove the Speed Demon Streamliner — a long, narrow, aerodynamic vehicle made to run at high speeds. According to the team website, he began working in motorsports in the 1980s and has been with the Speed Demon team for 13 years. "At this time, we ask everyone to please respect Chris's family, friends, and the Speed Demon team. We are deeply devastated," the team said in a statement. Aside from the Speed Demon team, the American Hot Rod Foundation also mourned Raschke's death. "To those who knew him on the salt, he was someone who found the perfect balance of friendly and competitive. Never a usual combination and one that speaks to the quality of his character," the association stated. "We send our deepest sympathies to Chris's family and friends." The Southern California Timing Association reported that 18 records were set in a total of 261 runs on Sunday. Seven of the records were achieved by cars and 11 were by motorcycles. Speed Week race director Keith Pedersen said Raschke's death was a huge blow to the community. "It's much more of a camaraderie and community, and that builds a lot of friendships and trust," Pedersen told KUTV. "He's a big part of it, and he will be sorely missed." Speed Week will continue at the Bonneville Salt Flats through Friday, August 8.

Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman shares message to lawmakers: "We can't let the evil of the night win"
Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman shares message to lawmakers: "We can't let the evil of the night win"

CBS News

time24 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman shares message to lawmakers: "We can't let the evil of the night win"

Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman spoke in a video message to legislative leaders across the country Monday, sharing a message to his colleagues to choose "governance over grievance." Hoffman survived an assassination attempt on June 14 when a gunman dressed as police officer shot him and his wife. The accused assassin, Vance Boelter, is also charged with murdering former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark. In his message at the National Conference of State Legislatures in Boston, Hoffman honored Hortman, calling her "the most consequential speaker in Minnesota history." "Minnesotans will feel the positive impact she had on our state for generations, but they will also feel her loss even harder," he said. Hoffman was shot nine times and spent three weeks in the ICU after undergoing surgery. The shooting, he said, would forever impact his family. "I want to speak candidly about something we all feel: the creeping erosion of public trust," Hoffman said. "Not just in institutions but in each other. In this climate we must recommit ourselves to governance over grievance. To service over self. And to action over anger." He went on to say that "terror in the night" is no strategy for positive change. "But as a Minnesotan, and as an American, I do know this: We can't let the evil of the night win. And we must redouble our efforts and reclaim the reason we are all public servants. We can listen, we can extend understanding even in disagreement," he said. "We can compromise not because it's easy but because the people we serve deserve better than constant stalemate built on partisan egos." Minnesota Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy also honored Hortman, calling her "brilliant, tenatious, funny and unassuming." "She always came ready to work. She was a partner and an ally and a formidable opponent. But her hallmark was her priority to get her work done for Minnesotans," Murphy said.

Maria Glod named Metro Editor
Maria Glod named Metro Editor

Washington Post

time24 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Maria Glod named Metro Editor

I'm thrilled to announce that Maria Glod will take on a new role as Metro Editor, driving our essential local coverage that serves our most loyal subscribers. No one in the building knows Metro — both the department and the region — better than Maria, who has spent her career on the desk. She has served since 2022 as Metro's deputy editor, and built a reputation across the newsroom for her collaboration, impeccable news judgment and empathetic and supportive leadership. She has been at the center of some of The Post's most ambitious storylines. She led coverage of the Paul Manafort trial in 2018, bringing together reporters from several desks to provide up-to-the-minute news in what became a precursor to the LUFs we use today. The live file combined news with smart context and analysis, deeply reported posts and reader-friendly explainers. She also had a key role in coverage of the Navy Yard mass shooting, the racial justice protests, police violence and rising homicides across the region. As deputy editor, she has overseen some of our sharpest coverage of local education, criminal justice, politics and enterprise. She helped coordinate reporting across desks of the midair collision in late January of an airplane and military helicopter and, more recently, coverage of the killings of two Israeli embassy workers outside the Capital Jewish Museum. As a reporter, Maria helped cover the cases of the D.C. snipers, some of the first DNA exonerations and racial disparities in Fairfax County schools. She was a reporter in our bureaus in Loudoun, Fairfax and Prince George's counties, as well as downtown, before shifting to editing in 2011. She joined The Post in 1997 as a two-year intern, assigned to Loudoun County as a cops reporter, and still misses wandering around Virginia in search of stories.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store