The Durham County Sheriff’s Office announced that a drug trafficking investigation resulted in the arrest of a man and the seizure of enough fentanyl to kill more than 2.3 million people.
On Wednesday night, the sheriff’s office’ Anti-Crime and Narcotics unit, with assistance from the State Bureau of Investigation, executed a search warrant at a home on Newland Place.
Law enforcement officers say they located several weapons, including an AR-15 and an AK-style assault rifle, a large sum of cash and narcotics. In addition to the 4.6 kilos of fentanyl, authorities said they seized 3.8 kilos of marijuana, 215 grams of cocaine, 12 grams of heroin and 23 grams of mushrooms.
Rodney Ephraim, 49, faces several charges. Those include trafficking in fentanyl and MSDP a controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a school.
“Two milligrams [of fentanyl] can be a lethal dose,” said Durham County Sheriff Clarence Birkhead. “According to DEA data, one kilo of fentanyl has the potential to kill 500,000 people. When you consider the population of Durham County is just under 350,000, it’s sobering to think of.”
Authorities are holding Ephraim in the Durham County Detention Center without bond.
LOWELL — The murder retrial of Billy, Billoeum, and Channa Phan is officially ready to proceed.
Jury impanelment is scheduled to begin in Middlesex Superior Court on Monday morning — or Tuesday if the winter storm forces the Kiernan Judicial Center to close.
The schedule was set on Friday during the final pretrial hearing, where Judge Chris Barry-Smith also denied a defense motion to dismiss the indictment against one of the three brothers, each charged with first-degree murder for the shooting death of 22-year-old Tyrone Phet outside his Lowell home in 2020.
Barry-Smith rejected the bid by attorney William Dolan, who represents defendant Channa Phan, ruling that although the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office failed to turn over information tied to a gang-motive theory in a timely fashion, the lapse did not rise to the level requiring dismissal.
Prosecutors have argued the residence functioned as a stash house for the Outlaws, street gang, which they claim the Phan brothers are members of. Due to the shooting, a search warrant was obtained by the Lowell Police for the Wilder Street home, where officers seized guns, ammunition, 200 grams of cocaine, and 100,000 pressed pills containing methamphetamine.
The shooting — allegedly carried out by rival gang Crazy Mob Family — triggered a retaliatory motive for the killing of Phet less than 24 hours later.
Phet was not alleged to be a CMF member, but prosecutors contend he lived in the same Spring Avenue building where a CMF member once resided.
Phet was shot to death in a hail of gunfire while sitting in his car outside the multi-family residence at 55 Spring Ave. Phet — a 2016 Chelmsford High graduate and captain of the football team his senior year — was struck eight times during the shooting.
The Lowell Police recovered 21 spent shell casings at the scene from two different caliber guns.
Barry‑Smith said the prosecution’s decision to pursue a broader gang theory in the retrial “not surprisingly” prompted the defense to seek all information police and prosecutors possessed about the Wilder Street shooting and subsequent search warrant.
Prior to the first trial — which ended in a mistrial after jurors became deadlocked —prosecutors turned over the police report about the incident but not the underlying investigative materials, Barry‑Smith said. That omission was not a major point of contention at the time because the initial trial’s lead prosecutor — former Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Daniel Harren — had elected not to pursue a wide‑ranging gang theory.
Once the new prosecution team sought to expand that scope, Barry‑Smith said, they were obligated to produce the full set of Wilder Street information — something they did not do until recent weeks.
“The Commonwealth’s principal shortcoming is that failure to produce Wilder Street information once it determined Wilder Street was relevant to the case,” Barry‑Smith said, adding that a secondary issue was that prosecutors “were not adequately familiar” with what evidence had been turned over during the first four years of the case, leading to a misunderstanding.
The judge described the discovery violation as the product of “mistake, inadvertence, misunderstanding, and a failure to be fully familiar” with prior disclosures — not an attempt to ambush the defense.
“It was not delivered, nor was it designed to spring evidence upon the defense,” Barry‑Smith said.
The judge reiterated that he has already denied the Commonwealth’s request to expand the scope of gang evidence for the retrial, calling the proposed showing “too thin.”
The Wilder Street material may be considered for rebuttal, but that will depend on how the trial unfolds.
Because prosecutors have since turned over the missing materials, and because the expanded gang theory will not be permitted, Barry‑Smith said dismissal was not warranted.
“I don’t find that the District Attorney’s Office’s conduct was purposeful or egregious,” he said.
As for jury selection, the expectation is it will take two days to get the needed pool of 16 jurors.
The trial will run daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day, with an hour‑long lunch break. Barry‑Smith said the case is expected to conclude by the end of the week of Feb. 9.
Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Thomas Brant told Barry-Smith that the prosecution intends to call more than 40 witnesses.
Brant also raised a scheduling wrinkle: Feb. 8 is Super Bowl Sunday, and with the New England Patriots still in contention for a spot in Super Bowl 60 as of the hearing, juror availability and the scheduling of witnesses could be affected.
“I don’t care, and my desire is to move the case as quickly as possible, but …” Brant said.
“I hadn’t thought of that,” Barry‑Smith replied, adding that he may delay the Feb. 9 start time to as late as 10 a.m.
“I might delay things on that Monday, but I’m not going to call it off,” he said.’
The Sun will publish weekly wrap-ups on the trial’s progress, with summaries appearing this Sunday and again on Feb. 8. A final story detailing the verdict will follow shortly after the jury reaches a decision, with the latest possible publication date being Feb. 15.
Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
BILLERICA
• Michael Parker, 50, 67 Salem Road, Billerica; assault with dangerous weapon, intoxicated licensee carrying firearm.
• Katherine Marie Main, 41, unknown address; fugitive from justice on court warrant.
LOWELL
• Brian Cooper, 29, 17 Yarmouth Drive, Nashua, N.H.; warrant (unlicensed operation of motor vehicle), operating motor vehicle without license.
• Luis Oliveras, 65, 144 High St., Apt. 2, Lowell; operation under influence of alcohol.
• Kosall Deth, 44, 73 Fort Hill Ave., Apt. 2, Lowell; warrant (failure to stop/yield).
• Kenneth Eng, 21, 27 Hastings St., Lowell; warrant (operation of motor vehicle with suspended license), failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.
• Kevin Sok, 32, 21 Main St., Dunstable; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.
• Nicholas Powell, 36, 301 Old Marshall Road, Dracut; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).
• Daniel Ramos-Vallejo, 23, 35 Temple St., Apt. 19, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.
• Thomas McGrath, 34, homeless; shoplifting, trespassing after notice.
• Mason Cruz, 30, 619 Gorham St., Apt. 2, Lowell; assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest.
• Mary Foley, 45, 93 Berkeley St., Billerica; breaking and entering motor vehicle, disturbing peace.
• Teddy Buckley, 36, homeless; trespassing.
• Betsy Bettencourt, 60, homeless; two counts of trespassing.
• Peter Gichuhi, 44, homeless; public drinking.
• Kristen Butler, 25, 205 Farrwood Drive, Haverhill; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of trespassing, and shoplifting by asportation), trespassing.
• Bryant Dottin, 28, 18 Morton St., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for unregistered motor vehicle, and suspended license).
• Divine Morse, 25, 271 E. Eighth St., No. 410, Boston; warrant (uninsured motor vehicle).
• Khaisone Sinlong, 30, 189 Walker St., No. 5, Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license, failure to stop/stop sign, warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).
• Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (possession of Class E drug).
• Joshua Rivera, 37, 57 Mount Vernon St., Lowell; warrant (distribution of Class A drug), trafficking in 18 grams or more of cocaine.
• Jeffrey Breitwieser, 38, homeless; assault on emergency medical technician or health care provider, trespassing.
NASHUA, N.H.
• Nathaniel Ciardelli, 32, no fixed address; criminal trespassing, theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).
• Marion Smith, 49, no fixed address; theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000), nonappearance in court.
• Cara Kulingoski, 48, no fixed address; warrant.
• Darryl Hudson, 43, 7 Van Buren St., Nashua; out of town warrants.
• Cameron Joseph Sousa, 21, 24 Gillis St., Nashua; nonappearances in court, suspension of vehicle registration, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, unregistered motor vehicle, operation of motor vehicle without valid license.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
BEDFORD
• Faith James, 62, of Bedford; warrant.
LOWELL
• Courtney Lavalle, 27, Lowell; fugitive from justice.
• Somrathony Soeng, 36, homeless; possession of Class B drug, warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class A drug).
• Jason Rodriguez, 40, 137 Pine St., Lowell; possession of Class B drug, warrants (failure to appear for two counts of trespassing), assault and battery on police officer.
• Aaron Meuse, 41, homeless; possession of Class B drug, trespassing.
• Richard Dodge II, 49, 252 Methuen St., Rear Apartment, Lowell; warrant (assault and battery).
• Carlos Fonseca, 24, 185 Moody St., Apt. C, Lowell; warrant (assault and battery with dangerous weapon, assault), assault with dangerous weapon (knife).
• Victor Rivera, 42, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).
• Leslie Carneiro, 34, homeless; trespassing.
• Jaryd Cote, 35, homeless; warrant (larceny under $1,200).
• Jose Zuna Cajilema, 21, 382 Pleasant St., Second Floor, Dracut; warrant (operation of motor vehicle without license).
• Raeli Amador, 54, 273 Summer St., Lowell; trespassing, possession of Class B drug.
• Jessica McMahon, 49, no fixed address; trespassing.
• Juan Nieves, 48, homeless; trespassing, resisting arrest, intimidating witness, violation of bylaws/ordinances (knife).
• John Boualaphanh, 32, 102 Nashua Road, Pepperell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, attaching plates violation.
• Ashley Hartwell, 36, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of trespassing, and drug possession).
• Keimy Ortiz, 36, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for larceny under $1,200), possession of Class B drug.
• Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class E drug).
• Melanie Listro, 38, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).
WOBURN — A case that stretched more than eight years reached its conclusion this week, as retired Dracut physician, Dr. Richard Miron, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and other charges tied to the illegal prescribing of opioids that led to a Lowell patient’s death.
Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office said Miron, 83, became the first doctor in Massachusetts to be convicted on involuntary manslaughter for prescribing opioids — a conviction that stemmed from the 2016 death of 50-year-old Michelle Craib. He also pleaded guilty to defrauding MassHealth and illegally prescribing medication to patients for no legitimate medical purpose.
Miron was ultimately sentenced in Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn on Monday to what amounts to five years of probation, allowing him to avoid prison time.
Miron’s attorney, Stephen Weymouth, said on Wednesday that he was prepared and confident to go to trial in a case that has faced a series of delays over the years, but after a conversation with his client earlier this month, the main concern became the possibility of serving time behind bars.
“From the very beginning he said, ‘I didn’t do anything wrong, and I want to go to trial,’” Weymouth said about Miron. “But then he said he did not want to go to jail.”
Weymouth pointed out that Miron was facing 47 charges, and any one of them could have resulted in a jail sentence. He said that prosecutors had previously sought four to five years in a plea deal, and the involuntary manslaughter charge carried a maximum of 20 years.
“Going to trial would have been a mistake because all it would have taken was one guilty hook and he would have gotten a pretty lengthy sentence, and I just couldn’t do that. I just couldn’t take any chances,” Weymouth said. “If he had gone to trial and lost, who knows what would have happened.”
Miron was indicted by a Middlesex County grand jury in December 2018 following an investigation that began in September 2017 by the AG’s Office, then headed by now-Gov. Maura Healey. Aside from involuntary manslaughter, he was charged with 23 counts of illegally prescribing controlled substances and 23 counts of filing false Medicaid claims.
From September 2015 to February 2016, the AG’s Office said Miron, a solo practitioner of internal medicine, was the largest provider of high-dose, short-acting oxycodone prescriptions among all MassHealth care providers statewide.
The Chief Medical Examiner’s Office determined Craib’s death was caused by acute intoxication from the combined effects of fentanyl, morphine, codeine, and butalbital — all prescribed by Miron. The AG’s Office said Miron was aware that Craib had previously overdosed on opioids he had prescribed, yet he continued to issue large doses to her on multiple occasions leading up to her death.
Prosecutors also said Miron illegally prescribed opioids to several other at-risk patients for no legitimate medical purpose. The illegal prescriptions Miron issued led pharmacies to unknowingly submit false bills to MassHealth for medication.
MassHealth terminated Miron from its program in September 2017, and he stopped practicing medicine in November 2018, following an agreement with the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine.
In 2023, Miron’s daughter, Linda Miron, penned a 17-page letter to the AG’s Office urging that the case be dropped. She argued that prosecuting her father — who had already relinquished his medical license and lived under pretrial probation since 2018 — was not in the interest of justice.
“To bring this flawed case to trial does not seem to me to be the best use of the Commonwealth’s resources, and I urge you to drop your prosecution of this case in the interest of justice,” Linda Miron said in the letter. “More broadly, I fear that prosecuting someone who was willing to take on disenfranchised, medically and psychologically complicated patients here in the Commonwealth, when some other physicians refused to take on MassHealth patients, will further discourage other physicians from treating these patients who deserve compassionate care.”
The case marched on until Monday, when Miron appeared in Middlesex Superior Court before Judge Cathleen Campbell, where it was finally resolved.
According to the AG’s Office, Miron was sentenced to two and a half years in a house of correction on illegal prescribing, suspended for five years — meaning he will serve the term as probation rather than prison time, unless he violates probation, in which case the sentence could be imposed. He was sentenced to five years of probation on the involuntary manslaughter charge. For Medicaid fraud, Miron was sentenced to six months in a house of correction, suspended for five years.
As part of his probation, Miron was ordered to pay full restitution to MassHealth and barred from practicing medicine or seeking reinstatement of his license.
According to Weymouth, Miron was glad to put the case behind him and most of all to avoid prison time. He noted that Miron had already given up his medical career and had no intention of practicing again.
In a press release announcing the case’s conclusion on Tuesday, the AG’s Office said the case reflects their “commitment to addressing the root causes of the opioid crisis and holding companies and individuals accountable for their role in contributing to the nationwide epidemic.”
Earlier this year, the release states, Campbell helped negotiate a $7.4 billion settlement in principle with Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family, which is expected to bring up to $105 million to Massachusetts. To date, the office said they have secured more than $1 billion in opioid-related recoveries, with more than $390 million already received. Those funds are being directed to the state’s Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund and distributed to cities and towns to support prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery efforts.
The AG’s Office added in the release that valuable assistance with the investigation into Miron’s case was provided by the Lowell Police Department, the State Police, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and MassHealth.
Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
BEDFORD
• Paul Gioiosa, 48, Bedford; warrants.
BILLERICA
• Jesse Rawson, 29, 12 Belva Road, Billerica; possession of Class B drug.
• Flith Derival, 35, 158 Concord Road, Billerica; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.
• Abudala Luhembo, 36, 2 Hampshire Road, Reading; assault and battery, possession of Class B drug.
• Megan Whittier, 53, 10 Roosevelt Road, Billerica; no inspection/sticker, operation of motor vehicle with suspended/revoked license.
LOWELL
• Priscilla Silva De Carvalho, 34, 11 Summit Ave., Third Floor, Lawrence; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).
• Melissa Rodriguez, 33, 48 Dublin St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.
• Chivonne Williams, 44, 27 Jackson St., Apt. 312, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class C drug), possession of Class B drug.
• Philip Haley, 66, 481 Bridge St., Lowell; possession of Class B drug.
• Patricia Boisvert, 27, 18 Auburn St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for receiving stolen motor vehicle).
• Dennis Foster, 46, homeless; warrant (shoplifting by asportation), possession of Class B drug.
• Mounthy Vongxay, 35, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery, breaking and entering building at nighttime, and larceny under $1,200).
• Danny Santos, 36, 111 Fort Hill Ave., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for two counts trespassing, and unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).
• Rafael Deleon, 58, 58 Oak St., Lowell; warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).
• Matthew Simard, 34, 701 Methuen St., Dracut; possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, manufacturing/dispensing Class B drug.
NASHUA, N.H.
• Matthew Paul Story Jr., 20, 171 Hartt Ave., Manchester, N.H.; criminal trespass.
• Christiana Braccio, 23, 16 Country Club Drive, Apt. 1, Manchester, N.H.; two counts of theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).
• Thomas Abreu, 33, 69B Chandler St., Nashua; simple assault.
• Gidean Andrade, 23, 871 Middlesex St., Apt. 7, Lowell; operation of motor vehicle without valid license.
• Bernard Leard, 83, 12 Tumblebrook Lane, Nashua; failure to procure dog license.
• Nicole Long, 35, 14 Cross St., Apt. 2, Nashua; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle without giving proof, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.
• Marques Stanford, 37, no fixed address; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.
• Sarah Felch, 43, no fixed address; warrant.
• Eliezer Rosario-Medina, 26, no fixed address; criminal trespass.
• David Perez, 37, no fixed address; nonappearance in court.
• Daniel Frost, 30, 3 Dolan St., Apt. 2, Nashua; criminal mischief.
• Jennifer Elaine Bowen, 52, 199 Manchester St., Manchester, N.H.; nonappearances in court.
• Nicholas Deveau, 28, 11 Wildwood Road, Tewksbury; disorderly conduct.
WESTFORD
• Ismael Paulino Mendoza, 23, Groton Road, Chelmsford; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, marked lanes violation.
WILMINGTON
• Morgan Lynch, 31, 4 Lockwood Road, Wilmington; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.
• Magno Moreira, 38, 345 Sutton St., North Andover; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, speeding.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Michael James, 52, homeless; trespassing after notice, warrant (failure to appear for trespassing), possession of Class A drug.
• Melanie Listro, 38, homeless; warrants (operation of motor vehicle with suspended registration, failure to appear for larceny under $1,200).
• Kristen Butler, 25, 205 Farrwood Drive, Haverhill; trespassing after notice, warrants (failure to appear for shoplifting, assault and battery on police officer, and trespassing).
• Chanda Moon, 42, 61 Avenue A, Lowell; trespassing after notice.
• Victor Mercado, 43, 17 Auburn St., Lowell; warrant (possession of Class A drug, failure to appear for shoplifting by asportation).
• Daniel Faria, 42, homeless; disturbing peace, trespassing, resisting arrest, warrants (breaking and entering building at nighttime for felony, failure to appear for shoplifting by asportation).
• Thomas Rocha, 21, 270 Lawrence St., Apt. 5, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, unregistered motor vehicle.
• Antonio Santiago, 45, 32 Willie St., Lowell; warrant (larceny over $1,200), possession of Class A drug.
• Devante Degree, 33, 305 Nesmith St., Apt. 1, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.
• Brian Bristol, 30, 160 Middlesex St., Boston; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, operating uninsured motor vehicle.
• Edwin Lavallee, 41, no fixed address; warrant (failure to appear for operation of motor vehicle with suspended license).
• Vannak Chea, 39, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for malicious damage to motor vehicle).
A massive police raid on a drug gang embedded in low-income neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro that left at least 119 people dead drew protests for excessive force Wednesday and calls for the Rio’s governor to resign.
Families of the dead decried what they described as executions by police, while the state government hailed a successful operation against a powerful criminal group that has taken over large swaths of the city.
Dozens of favelas residents gathered in front of the state’s government headquarters shouting “assassins!” and waving Brazilian flags stained with red paint, a day after Rio’s deadliest raid and hours after families and residents laid dozens of dead bodies on a street in one of the targeted communities to show the magnitude of the operation.
BBC News verified several videos showing dozens of bodies laid out in a row in a market area of Rio, in its northern Penha district.
Questions quickly arose about the death count and the state of the bodies, with reports of disfigurement and knife wounds. Brazil’s Supreme Court, prosecutors and lawmakers asked Rio state Gov. Claudio Castro to provide detailed information about the operation.
“This was a massacre,” said Barbara Barbosa, a domestic worker from the Penha complex of favelas, one of the two huge communities targeted in the police operation. She said her son was killed in a prior operation in Penha.
People line up bodies on Sao Lucas Square of the Vila Cruzeiro favela at the Penha complex in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on October 29, 2025, in the aftermath of Operacao Contencao (Operation Containment).
PABLO PORCIUNCULA/AFP via Getty Images
“Do we have a death sentence? Stop killing us,” said activist Rute Sales, 56. Many residents came Penha in Rio’s poor, northern zone to the imposing Guanabara Palace on motorbikes.
The toll of 115 suspects and four policemen killed was an increase over what authorities originally said were 60 suspects dead in Tuesday’s raid by about 2,500 police and soldiers in the favelas of Penha and Complexo de Alemao.
Felipe Curi, Rio state police secretary, told a news conference that bodies of additional suspects were found in a wooded area where he said they had worn camouflage while battling with security forces. He said local residents had removed clothing and equipment from the bodies, in what would be investigated as evidence tampering.
“These individuals were in the woods, equipped with camouflage clothing, vests and weapons. Now many of them appeared wearing underwear or shorts, with no equipment, as if they had come through a portal and changed clothes,” Curi said.
Earlier Wednesday, in the neighborhood of Penha, residents had surrounded many of the bodies – collected in trucks and displayed in a main square – and shouted “massacre” and “justice” before forensic authorities arrived to retrieve the remains.
“They can take them to jail, why kill them like this? Lots of them were alive and calling for help,” resident Elisangela Silva Santos, 50, said during the gathering in Penha. “Yes they’re traffickers, but they’re human.”
“They slit my son’s throat”
A day after the police operation paralyzed the city, residents of the Complexo da Penha favela recovered dozens of bodies from a forest on its outskirts, including one that was decapitated, AFP journalists witnessed.
“They slit my son’s throat, cut his neck, and hung the head from a tree like a trophy,” said Raquel Tomas, the mother of the 19-year-old who was found decapitated.
“They executed my son without giving him a chance to defend himself. He was murdered,” she told AFP, her voice shaking.
“Everyone deserves a second chance. During an operation, police should do their job, arrest suspects, but not execute them,” Tomas added.
A woman cries outside Getulio Vargas Hospital shortly after her relative was brought here by police due to injury during a police operation against alleged drug traffickers in the Complexo do Alemao favela where the criminal organization “Comando Vermelho” operates in Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.
Silvia Izquierdo / AP
Lawyer Albino Pereira Neto, who represents three families that lost relatives, told AFP some of the bodies bore “burn marks” and that a number of those killed had been tied up.
Some were “murdered in cold blood,” he said.
“We saw executed people”
The tally of suspects arrested stood at 113 – up from 81 cited previously, Curi said. The state government said some 90 rifles and more than a ton of drugs were seized.
Police and soldiers had launched the raid in helicopters, armored vehicles and on foot, targeting the Red Command gang. They drew gunfire and other retaliation from gang members, sparking scenes of chaos across the city on Tuesday. Schools in the affected areas shuttered, a local university canceled classes, and roads were blocked with buses used as barricades.
Rafael Soares, a journalist covering crime in Rio, told BBC News Brasil that the Red Command had been on the offensive in Rio in recent years, reclaiming territory it had lost to its rivals, First Capital Command.
Many shops remained closed Wednesday morning in Penha, where local activist Raull Santiago said he was part of a team that found about 15 bodies before dawn.
“We saw executed people: shot in the back, shots to the head, stab wounds, people tied up. This level of brutality, the hatred that is spread – there’s no other way to describe it except as a massacre,” Santiago said.
Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered Castro to provide information about the police operation and scheduled a hearing with the state governor and the heads of the military and civil police next Monday in Rio.
The Senate’s commission for human rights said it was asking for clarifications from the Rio state government. Meanwhile, Rio prosecutors requested that Castro provide detailed information about the operation and proof that there was no less harmful means of achieving its objectives.
Police officers escort a suspect arrested during the Operacao Contencao (Operation Containment) out of the Vila Cruzeiro favela, in the Penha complex, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on October 28, 2025.
MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP via Getty Images
And the federal public prosecutor’s office asked the Forensic Medical Institute to ensure that autopsy reports contain full descriptions and photographic and radiographic documentation of all injuries.
Castro said on Tuesday that Rio was at war against “narco-terrorism,” a term that echoed the Trump administration in its campaign against drug smuggling in Latin America.
On Wednesday, Castro called the operation a “success,” apart from the deaths of the four police officers.
Rio’s state government said that the suspects who had been killed had resisted police.
Rio has been the scene of lethal police raids for decades. In March 2005, some 29 people were killed in Rio’s Baixada Fluminense region, while in May 2021, 28 were killed in the Jacarezinho favela.
But the scale and lethality of Tuesday’s operation are unprecedented. Non-governmental organizations and the U.N. human rights body quickly raised concerns over the high number of reported fatalities and called for investigations.
“We fully understand the challenges of having to deal with violent and well-organized groups such as Red Command,” said U.N. Human Rights Spokesperson Marta Hurtado said.
But Brazil must “break this cycle of extreme brutality and ensure that law enforcement operations comply with international standards regarding the use of force,” she said, adding that the body was calling for full-fledged policing reform.
Late on Wednesday, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said on X that he had instructed the justice minister and director-general of Federal Police to meet Castro for a meeting in Rio.
Brazil cannot accept that organized crime “continues to destroy families, oppress residents, and spread drugs and violence across cities,” he said.
The operation’s stated objectives were capturing leaders and limiting the territorial expansion of the Red Command gang, which has increased its control over favelas in recent years.
Gang members allegedly targeted police with at least one drone. Rio de Janeiro’s state government shared a video on X of what appeared to show a drone firing a projectile from the sky.
“Drones dropping bombs is now a trend used by heavily armed criminal groups,” Carlos Solar from the Royal United Services Institute told BBC News.
Rio “alone in this war”
Gov. Castro, from the conservative opposition Liberal Party, said Tuesday that Rio was “alone in this war.” He said the federal government should be providing more support to combat crime – in a swipe at the administration of Lula’s leftist administration.
His comments were challenged by the Justice Ministry, which said it had responded to requests from Rio’s state government to deploy national forces in the state, renewing their presence 11 times.
Gleisi Hoffmann, the Lula administration’s liaison with the parliament, agreed that more coordinated action was needed but pointed to a recent crackdown on money laundering as an example of the federal government’s action on organized crime.
Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski said it was clearly an extremely bloody and violent operation.
“We should reflect on whether this kind of action is compatible with the Democratic Rule of Law that governs us all,” he told journalists on Wednesday.
Criminal gangs have expanded their presence across Brazil in recent years, including in the Amazon rainforest.
Roberto Uchôa, from the Brazilian Forum on Public Safety think-tank, said that criminal gangs have strengthened despite these kinds of operations, suggesting that they are inefficient.
“Killing more than 100 people like this won’t help decrease the Red Command’s expansion. The dead will soon be replaced,” Uchôa said.
About 2,500 Brazilian police and soldiers launched a massive raid on a drug-trafficking gang in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday, arresting 81 suspects and sparking shootouts that left at least 60 suspects and four police officers dead, officials said.
The operation included officers in helicopters and armored vehicles and targeted the notorious Red Command in the sprawling low-income favelas of Complexo de Alemao and Penha, police said.
The police operation was one of the most violent in Brazil’s recent history, with human rights organizations calling for investigations into the deaths.
Rio’s state Gov. Claudio Castro said in a video posted on X that 60 criminal suspects were “neutralized” during the massive raid that he called the biggest such operation in the city’s history. Some 81 suspects were arrested, while 93 rifles and more than half a ton of drugs were seized, the state government said, adding that those killed “resisted police action.”
Rio’s civil police said on X that four officers died in Tuesday’s operation. “The cowardly attacks by criminals against our agents will not go unpunished,” it said.
Police officers escort a suspect arrested during the Operacao Contencao (Operation Containment) out of the Vila Cruzeiro favela, in the Penha complex, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on October 28, 2025.
MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP via Getty Images
Residents scrambled for cover and shops closed their doors amid police claims that the gangs were using drones to fight back, Agence France-Presse reported.
Castro posted a video on X of what he described as a gang-controlled drone launching a projectile from the cloudy sky.
“This is how the Rio police are treated by criminals: with bombs dropped by drones. This is the scale of the challenge we face. This is not ordinary crime, but narcoterrorism,” he said.
State officials said at least 50 of those killed were “indicated by police as suspected of being criminals,” BBC News reported. Dozens of people were injured, including civilians caught in the crossfire, according to the BBC.
The United Nations’ human rights body said it was “horrified” by the deadly police operation, called for effective investigations and reminded authorities of their obligations under international human rights law.
César Muñoz, director of Human Rights Watch in Brazil, called Tuesday’s events “a huge tragedy” and a “disaster.”
“The public prosecutor’s office must open its own investigations and clarify the circumstances of each death,” Muñoz said in a statement.
Footage on social media showed fire and smoke rising from the two favelas as gunfire rang out. The city’s Education Department said 46 schools across the two neighborhoods were closed, and the nearby Federal University of Rio de Janeiro canceled night classes and told people on campus to seek shelter.
Suspected gang members blocked roads in northern and southeastern Rio in response to the raid, local media reported. At least 70 buses were commandeered to be used in the blockades, causing significant damage, the city’s bus organization Rio Onibus said.
The operation Tuesday followed a year of investigation into the criminal group, police said.
Gov. Castro, from the conservative opposition Liberal Party, said the federal government should be providing more support to combat crime – a swipe at the administration of leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
Gleisi Hoffmann, the Lula administration’s liaison with the parliament, agreed that coordinated action was needed but pointed to a recent crackdown on money laundering as an example of the federal government’s action on organized crime.
Vice President Geraldo Alckmin and a number of ministers met in response to the operation on Tuesday afternoon. Chief of Staff Rui Costa requested an emergency meeting in Rio on Wednesday, with him in attendance as well as Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski.
Emerging from Rio’s prisons, the Red Command criminal gang has expanded its control in favelas in recent years.
“Russian roulette”
Rio has been the scene of lethal police raids for decades. In March 2005, some 29 people were killed in Rio’s Baixada Fluminense region, while in May 2021, 28 were killed in the Jacarezinho favela.
While the Tuesday’s police operation was similar to previous ones, its scale was unprecedented, said Luis Flavio Sapori, a sociologist and public safety expert at Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais.
“What’s different about today’s operation is the magnitude of the victims. These are war numbers,” he said.
He argued that these kinds of operations are inefficient because they do not tend to catch the masterminds, but rather target underlings who can later be replaced.
“It’s not enough to go in, exchange gunfire, and leave. There’s a lack of strategy in Rio de Janeiro’s public security policy,” Sapori said. “Some lower-ranking members of these factions are killed, but those individuals are quickly replaced by others.”
The Marielle Franco Institute, a nonprofit founded by the slain councilwoman ‘s family to continue her legacy of fighting for the rights of people living in favelas, also criticized the operation.
“This is not a public safety policy. It’s a policy of extermination, that makes the everyday life of Black and poor people a Russian roulette,” it said in a statement.
“Everyone is terrified”
AFP saw police in the Vila Cruzeiro neighborhood of Penha district guarding about 20 young people huddled together and sitting on the sidewalk, heads bowed, barefoot, and shirtless.
“This is the first time we’ve seen drones (from criminals) dropping bombs in the community,” said a Penha resident, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“Everyone is terrified because there’s so much gunfire,” she added.
A woman cries outside Getulio Vargas Hospital shortly after her relative was brought here by police due to injury during a police operation against alleged drug traffickers in the Complexo do Alemao favela where the criminal organization “Comando Vermelho” operates in Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.
Silvia Izquierdo / AP
Raids in the favelas are common but this was the deadliest one yet. Until now the highest death toll came in a raid in 2021 that left 28 people dead.
Tuesday’s operation ground traffic on many of the seaside city’s main streets to a halt.
“We’re left without buses, without anything, in this chaos and not knowing what to do,” said Regina Pinheiro, a 70-year-old retiree, who was trying to return home.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Cyrinus Morris, 56, 17 Equestrian Lane, Lowell; public drinking.
NASHUA, N.H.
• Andrew Gordon Cannon, 28, no fixed address; disorderly conduct.
• Jaden Peter Davies, 21, 254 Greenville Road, Mason, N.H.; two counts of traffic control device violation, disobeying an officer, reckless operation of motor vehicle, lane control violation, two counts of failure to use required turn signal, yellow/solid line violation.
• Luis Antonio Fernandez Feliciano, 47, 31 Vine St., Nashua; violation of protective order, theft of services ($0-$1,000), two counts of stalking.
• Jennifer Smith, 41, no fixed address; stalking.
• Jacob Kenney, 33, no fixed address; theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).
• Paul Nolin, 69, 12 Hunters Lane, Nashua; theft by deception ($0-$1,000).
• Matthew Dozibrin, 52, 2 Quincy St., Nashua; warrant.
• Michael William Bedard, 39, 5 Shedds Ave., Nashua; six counts of simple assault.
• Rasmei Ung-Cora Flores, 45, 13 South St., Nashua; driving under influence.
• Matthew Brian Young, 33, 10 Winchester St., Nashua; out of town warrant, disobeying an officer, three counts of lane control device, three counts of failure to use required turn signal, two counts of reckless operation of motor vehicle, four counts of traffic control device violation.
• Luis Carlos Pacheco, 37, no fixed address; driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, suspension of vehicle registration.
WILMINGTON
• Giancarlo Danao Ybanez, 38, 165 Pleasant St., Apt. 101, Cambridge; uninsured motor vehicle, unregistered motor vehicle.
• Carlos Mendez, 33, 463 Eastern Ave., Apt. 3C, Lynn; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle, failure to stop/yield, no or expired inspection/sticker.
• Thomas Doyle IV, 40, 59 North St., Wilmington; malicious destruction of property (less than $1,200), threatening to commit crime.
• Liam Patrick O’Brien, 41, 1037 Main St., Apt. 1, Woburn; operation under influence of alcohol, possession of open container of alcohol in motor vehicle.
• Eneias Silva, 50, 20 Locust St., Apt. 102, Medford; speeding in violation of special regulation, operation of motor vehicle with suspended license.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• San Sin, 47, homeless; trespassing.
• Daniel Dufault, 51, 51 Fetherston Ave., Lowell; warrant (probation violation for assault with dangerous weapon).
• Jason Monteiro, 18, 84 School St., Lowell; failure to stop for police, operating motor vehicle to endanger, failure to stop at red light.
• Somara Chin, 37, 84 E St., Apt. 1, Lowell; warrant (assault and battery with dangerous weapon).
• Brittany Forest, 40, 199 Manchester, N.H.; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).
• Jonathan Arce, 38, homeless; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, receive/buy/possess/conceal stolen motor vehicle.
• Daniel Alicea, 25, 162 Lakeview Ave., Lowell; warrants (murder, distribution of Class B drug, operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, failure to appear for forge/misuse of RMV signature).
• Carlos Rodriguez, 43, 80 Bowdoin St., Apt. 1, Lawrence; warrant (assault and battery).
• Jason Rodriguez, 40, 137 Pine St., Lowell; trespassing.
• Ivan Marquez, 45, 593 Market St., Apt. 335, Lowell; warrant (larceny under $1,200).
• Jason Ayotte, 45, homeless; unlawful camping on public property.
• Curtis Glenn, 38, 255 School St., Apt. A, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).
• Krim Em, 58, 69 Walker St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for operation of motor vehicle with suspended license).
• Melanie Listro, 38, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for larceny under $1,200, and trespassing).
• Divene Sanabria, 31, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for miscellaneous municipal ordinance, and trespassing).
• Joseph Moore, 37, 15 Maple St., Apt. 302, Dorchester; warrant (assault and battery with dangerous weapon), operating motor vehicle without suspension.
• Kayla Chatham, 24, 1088 Dover Road, No. 103, Epsom, N.H.; warrants (larceny under $1,200, and assault and battery with dangerous weapon).
• Michael Dalton, 35, 606 School St., No. 3, Lowell; disturbing peace, possession of Class E drug, possession of dangerous weapon (knife).
• Victor Rivera, 42, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).
• Angel Macas Avila, 37, 57 Marshall Ave., No. 2, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, operating motor vehicle to endanger, failure to stop for police, failure to stop at stop sign, operating motor vehicle without headlights.
• Shawn Reardon, 41, 3 San Mateo Drive, Chelmsford; disorderly conduct, assault and battery of police officer, disturbing peace.
• Alyssa Wright, 27, 10 Sawyer St., Wareham; manufacturing/dispensing Class B drug, conspiracy drug law (felony), trafficking in cocaine (36 grams or more), warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery with dangerous weapon, use of motor vehicle without authority, and trespassing).
• Omari Robinson, 28, 15 Elm St., Lowell; trafficking in cocaine (36 grams or more), assault and battery with dangerous weapon (shod foot), conspiracy drug law (felony), manufacturing dispensing Class A drug, resisting arrest.
• Jocius Mercedes, 19, 115 Salem St., No. 1, Lowell; disorderly conduct, assault and battery on police officer, affray, resisting arrest.
More than 200 pounds of cannabis was seized and a driver was arrested following a traffic stop on Interstate 80 in Berkeley during the Monday evening commute, authorities said.
Around 5:30 p.m., officers from the Oakland Area office pulled over a Chrysler SUV traveling westbound near Gilman Avenue after the driver was allegedly on their cellphone.
During the traffic stop, officers said they detected a “strong odor of cannabis” coming from the vehicle. In addition, multiple large trash bags were seen in the rear cargo area of the SUV.
Officers conducted a probable cause search. According to the CHP, 218 pounds of cannabis was seized and booked into evidence.
More than 200 pounds of cannabis that CHP officers said they seized during a traffic stop on Interstate 80 in Berkeley on Oct. 6, 2025.
CHP Oakland Area Office
“While personal cannabis use and possession are legal in California, strict regulations apply to its commercial cultivation, transportation, and distribution,” the agency said in a statement. “Individuals engaged in these activities must possess proper licensing and documentation in compliance with the law.”
The driver was arrested on suspicion of unlawful transportation of cannabis for sale without a license, the CHP said.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
• Neftaly Nunez De La Cruz, 37, 37 Bodwell St., Lawrence; fugitive from justice, warrant (failure to appear for jury duty).
• Jennifer Toupin, 51, 1 Danforce Road, Apt. 21, Nashua, N.H.; warrant (failure to appear for fraud), courtesy booking (U.S. Park Police).
• Winner Mandeni, 22, 190 First St., Apt. A, Lowell; indecent assault and battery on person 14 years or older.
• Morselle Simmons, 20, 3 Ardell St., Lowell; assault and battery with dangerous weapon causing severe bodily injury (knife).
• Dennis Foster, 46, homeless; possession of Class E drug, possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, possession of Class A drug with intent to distribute.
• Jason Ferrer, 44, 25 Common Ave., Lowell; public drinking.
• Alana Guarini, 21, homeless; assault with dangerous weapon (frying pan), warrants (larceny of motor vehicle, failure to appear for operating motor vehicle under influence).
• Miguel Rivera, 34, 158 Concord Road, Billerica; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.
• Catherine Doyle, 49, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).
• James Bowman, 64, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of larceny under $1,200, shoplifting by asportation, breaking and entering vehicle at nighttime).
WESTFORD
• Freddie Serrano, 58, King Street, Littleton; carrying dangerous weapon, two bicycle violations (false name, wrong side of roadway).
WILMINGTON
• Michael Adam Holden, 36, 2111 Avalon Drive, Wilmington; uninsured motor vehicle, unregistered motor vehicle.
On Wednesday, a judge sentenced Phyu Win Jame to spend two years in prison, followed by four years of supervised release.
Prosecutors accused the defendants of traveling from the Twin Cities to Phoenix in 2022 to buy synthetic drugs and then mailing the pills back to multiple metro spots inside of Squishmallows plush toys. Investigators say 280,000 pills, estimated to be valued at more than $2 million and equaling more than 30,000 grams, were seized in the bust.
Initially, charges were filed against six people, but that number increased in March of 2024, when Jame, as well as Da’Shawn Natori Domena and Amaya Tiffany-Nicole Mims were alleged to have a role in the ring. The six people initially charged are Cornell Chandler Jr., Shardai Allen, Quijuan Bankhead, Stardasha Davenport-Mounger, Fo’Tre White and Robiel Williams.
All of the defendants have pleaded guilty, and more than half have been sentenced.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Carlos Morales, 44, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for conspiracy to violate drug laws, trespassing, and possession of Class A drug).
• Angela Lourm, 56, 28 Varney St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license, operation under influence of alcohol.
• Craig Blanchard, 40, 51 View St., Dracut; assault and battery on police officer.
• Ibrahim Kabba, 55, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for indecent exposure).
• Jeffrey Mitchell, 18, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for negligent operation of motor vehicle, and unlicensed operation of motor vehicle), disorderly conduct.
• Zachary Burgoyne, 27, 259 Sawmill Drive, Dracut; open and gross lewdness.
• Jorge Santos, 46, 57 Marshall Ave., No. 3, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).
• Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (destruction of property).
• Josman Calo, 27, 83 Park Ave. W., Apt. 6, Lowell; unlawful carrying dangerous weapon/firearm, discharging gun within 500 feet of dwelling, unlawful possession of ammunition.
• Nelson Gelardi, 44, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, larceny, and breaking and entering vehicle at night), possession of Class A drug.
• Gordon Schofield, 43, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for larceny).
• Michael Dalton, 35, 606 School St., Apt. 3, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.
• Eddie Alvarez, 46, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing.
• Nysaiah Gonzalez, 19, 200 Massmills Drive, No. 219, Lowell; carrying firearm while loaded, carrying firearm without license, unlawful possession of large capacity feeding device.
• Shawn McCarthy, 41, Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery on person 60 or older/disabled, probation violation for threatening to commit crime).
The Coast Guard offloaded a record-breaking haul with an estimated worth of nearly $500 million. Over the course of two months, officials say they seized more than 61,000 pounds of cocaine. Nicole Sganga has details.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Nicole Ellison, 45, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for shoplifting by asportation).
• Milciades Ramirez Ramon, 37, 187 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing after notice, violation of bylaws/ordinances (knife).
• Apahlo Sullivan, 29, 18 Park View St., No. 1, Boston; warrant (probation violation for possession Class B drug), possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, possession of Class A drug with intent to distribute, manufacturing/dispensing Class A drug.
• Wendy Alicea, 46, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for breaking and entering, and vandalizing property).
• Eric Roy, 40, 16 Wright St., Lowell; warrant (leaving scene of property damage), operating motor vehicle after license suspension, possession of Class A drug, possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, receiving stolen property under $1,200, miscellaneous motor vehicle offense (conceal plate).
• Katelynn Gravlin, 26, homeless; assault and battery with dangerous weapon (knife), assault and battery of police officer, resisting arrest.
• Matthew Howard Gerling, 21, 36 Tsienneto Road, Derry, N.H.; driving without giving proof, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, speeding 21 to 24 mph over limit of 55 mph or less.
• Maria Vazquez Poveda, 51, 79 Elm St., Apt. 6, Nashua; simple assault.
• Rafael Rodriguez-Torres, 42, 11 Merrimack St., Nashua; failure to appear at arraignment, warrant.
BELLPORT, Long Island (WABC) — The amount of fentanyl seized during a major drug trafficking bust in Bellport was “enough to kill everyone on Long Island,” according to Suffolk County officials.
Officers arrested and indicted 43-year-old Bellport resident Remon Gibson after 33 pounds of narcotics, including 15 pounds of fentanyl and 17.5 pounds of cocaine, was seized from his home on Sunburst Lane on September 25.
“The amount of deadly narcotics seized in this operation is staggering. There was enough fentanyl here to kill every man, woman, and child on Long Island,” said Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney. “This case underscores our unwavering commitment to dismantling drug operations that threaten our communities.”
In addition to the various types of illegal drug paraphernalia, authorities seized around $80,000 in cash, a drug ledger, and kilo presses, including one with plates used for bricks of fentanyl and cocaine, stamped “COVID 19.”
Officials say a large amount of fentanyl was allegedly found on a nightstand in Gibson’s bedroom, which was adjacent to a room occupied by his two children. Cocaine was also allegedly found hidden in a trap behind a backyard shed.
On Wednesday, Gibson was arraigned on an indictment on charges including operating as a major trafficker, criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first and third degree, criminally using drug paraphernalia and endangering the welfare of a child.
A judge ordered Gibson held on $200,000 cash, $800,000 bond or $2,000,000 partially secured bond.
Gibson’s attorney George Duncan released a statement to Eyewitness News about his client.
“My client maintains his innocence,” Duncan said. “We look forward to defending the allegations in the court room. We will evaluate the discovery to see if it supports the claims made by the district attorney.”
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The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Sarath Pan, 40, 41 E St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for assault with dangerous weapon), resisting arrest.
• Richard Harris, 38, homeless; trespassing after notice, breaking and entering at daytime with intent to commit a misdemeanor.
• Ivan Marquez, 44, 593 Market St., Apt. 335, Lowell; warrant (conspiracy to violate drug law).
• Luis Rodriguez, 39, 2 Hancock Ave., Apt. 1, Lowell; warrants (breaking and entering vehicle at nighttime, breaking and entering building at nighttime).
• Alexander Cormier, 30, 100 Massmills Drive, Unit 302, Lowell; warrant (vandalizing property).
• Wilfredo Rivera, 36, homeless; trespassing after notice.
• George Lavoie, 50, homeless; warrant (possession of Class B drug).
• Stephen Stirk, 35, homeless; warrant (possession of Class A drug).
• Cristian Escotto, 29, homeless; trespassing.
• Jason Rodriguez, 39, 137 Pine St., Apt. 20, Lowell; possession of Class A drug, wanton destruction of property.
• Samoeuth Som, 40, homeless; possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute.
• Tiffany Plourde, 32, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for shoplifting, and two counts of possession of Class A drug).
• Jose Hernandez, 44, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for distribution of Class A drug, probation violation for threatening to commit crime).
• San Sin, 52, 121 Bellevue St., Lowell; warrant (failure to pay fine for no inspection sticker), operating motor vehicle after license suspension.
WILMINGTON
• Caleb Sabu, 21, 97 Brandywyne Drive, Boston; operation of motor vehicle with registration revoked/suspended, uninsured motor vehicle, operate a motor vehicle in violation of license restriction.
• Jonathan Warren Delisle, 43, 97 Coral St., Haverhill; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, no or expired inspection/sticker.
• Xiaoliang Yao, 36, 292 Old Billerica Road, Bedford; operating motor vehicle under influence of alcohol, negligent operation of motor vehicle.
• Jason Pelletier, 43, 490 Rantoul St., Apt. 31, Beverly; uninsured motor vehicle, unregistered motor vehicle.
• Angel Luis Castro, 35, 195 Smith St., Apt. 2, Lowell; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle, possession of open container of alcohol in motor vehicle, speeding in violation of special regulation.
The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
BILLERICA
• Leonard Henry Spinney III, 33, 19 Malvern Ave., Tyngsboro; operation under influence of alcohol, possession of open container of alcohol, marked lanes violation.
• Anthony Toogood, 58, 11 Fay St., Lowell; shoplifting by asportation.
LOWELL
• Ashley Brien, 35, 123 Fletcher St., Apt. 7, Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery, assault and battery on police officer, and operation under influence of alcohol).
• James Pelham, 53, homeless; warrant (breaking and entering into motor vehicle).
• Fernando Calixto, 42, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for conspiracy to violate drug law), trafficking/distribution/possessing/dispensing/manufacturing 10 grams or more of fentanyl.
• Jeffrey Cabrera, 29, 519 Haverhill St., Lawrence; warrants (juror fail to appear, unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).
• Juan Baez, 21, 486 Andover St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for assault and battery with dangerous weapon).
• Thomas McGrath, 33, homeless; warrant (larceny from person).
• Sheila Mouleart, 39, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for shoplifting, possession of Class A drug, possession of Class B drug, possession of Class E drug, and larceny under $1,200).
• Patricia Boisvert, 25, homeless; warrants (threatening to commit crime, failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).
• Alexandro Rivera, 44, no fixed address; assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest, warrants (possession of Class B drug, failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).
• Loc Dang, 48, homeless; possession of Class B drug, trespassing, public drinking.
• Kristen Ervin, 41, 4 Mount Pleasant St., Apt. 210, Billerica; assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest.
• Cecil Retamar-Ramos, 37, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for carrying dangerous weapon, and possession of Class B drug).
• Michael Galarza Olivero, 36, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing.
WESTFORD
• Flavia Batista Silva, 26, Davis Road, Acton; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle, speeding at rate of speed exceeding posted limit, warrant (motor vehicle offenses).