‘Field test’ results in $3.4M bust said fentanyl, lab results said cocaine, task force now says

UPDATE @ 9:24 p.m.: Officials with the Miami Valley Bulk Smuggling Task Force issued the following statement:

“In regards to the drug arrest that happened on June 11th, 2018, the drugs tested positive for Fentanyl during a ‘field test’ and intelligence gathered during the investigation indicated the group was allegedly involved in narcotics trafficking.

“Upon further testing of the drugs, at the Miami Valley Regional Crime Lab, it was determined that the contents inside the packages contained Cocaine not Fentanyl. It is not uncommon for ‘field tests’ to sometimes differ from Laboratory testing, which is why laboratory testing in required and necessary in all drug cases.

We still consider this investigation to be a major success as twenty pounds of illegal drugs were taken from the streets.

The suspects are still facing federal charges that could lead to significant prison time.”

INITIAL REPORT (June 28)

The drug seizure announced June 12 by Ohio’s attorney general and a local sheriff as $3.4 million worth of “pure fentanyl” actually was cocaine, according to federal court documents.

Four defendants were indicted Tuesday in Dayton’s U.S. District Court on conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five or more kilograms of cocaine. One defendant also was charged with trying to transport about $100,000 of drug proceeds back to Mexico.

RELATED: How the big drug bust went down

All four were arraigned Wednesday and pleaded not guilty. The conspiracy count carries a prison sentence of 10 years to life and up to a $10 million fine. A telephone pretrial conference is scheduled for next week.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and Montgomery County Sheriff Phil Plummer held a press conference earlier this month and announced the fentanyl seized in Clark County by the Miami Valley Bulk Smuggling Task Force was enough to kill “every man, woman and child in the Miami Valley,” according to DeWine.

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A spokeswoman for DeWine’s office said Thursday that she “was not aware” that the indictment was for cocaine and that she would inquire about the situation. Later, she told this news organization DeWine would defer to local law enforcement.

The criminal complaint stated that one of nine brick-shaped packages “was probed producing a white powdery substance” that “field-tested positive for the presence of fentanyl.”

RELATED: ‘Our people are in the game to win’ Large fentanyl bust by task force

Plummer said Thursday the substance hadn’t been lab-tested before the press conference, which included a full-color cardboard sign with “Fentanyl Arrests” and the defendants’ four mug shots and the drugs and money displayed on a table.

“The detective opened one up and he said it was pure fentanyl,” said Plummer, who said he would check with the detective about the process. “They didn’t open up all of them. It wasn’t tested. So he assumed it was all fentanyl.”

RELATED: 2 men indicted for trafficking enough fentanyl to kill 1 million people

A message seeking comment was left with a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

The complaint detailed surveillance that led to the arrest of Reyes Espinosa-Aguilar, 43, of New Carlisle plus Omar Alejandro Cantu-Garcia, 28, David Guillermo Cantu-Garcia, 30 and Pedro Medina, 40, all of Nuevo Leon, Mexico.

All were indicted on the conspiracy charge while Espinosa-Aguilar, aka Rodrigo Martinez Jr., also faces the drug proceeds transporting charge.

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