Federal investigators say authorities made the biggest fentanyl pill bust in Minnesota history when they broke up a trafficking operation that used the mail to send toy animals stuffed with the drug to the state from Arizona.
Six men and women were charged in U.S. District Court in St. Paul with conspiracy to distribute the powerfully addictive opiate from August to December in 2022.
One of the investigating agencies, the Washington County Sheriff's Office, said the unprecedented haul totaled 280,000 pills that weighed more than 66 pounds and had a street value of roughly $2.2 million.
"We continue to see the devastating impacts of fentanyl in our communities," Sheriff Dan Starry said in a statement Friday.
Starry, whose office pointed out that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration considers 2 milligrams of fentanyl a potentially lethal dose, added, "With this seizure, we know that hundreds, if not thousands of lives have been saved."
One of the defendants, 27-year-old Fo'Tre Devine White of St. Paul, also was charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm and possession of a machine gun.
Prosecutors said one of two pistols White had in his possession was modified to fire multiple times with a single squeeze of the trigger.
U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger identified White's co-defendants as Cornell Montez Chandler Jr., 24; Robiel Lee Williams, 23; and Quijuan Hosea Bankhead, 30, all of St. Paul; along with Stardasha Christina Davenport-Mounger, 24; and Shardai Rayshell Allen, 24, both of Minneapolis.