School children used to sell drugs on street corners, 14 arrested in Pennsylvania bust

Wednesday, July 10, 2019
PHILADELPHIA -- More than a dozen people have been arrested in an operation targeting the drug trade in the Kensington section of Philadelphia.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced on Tuesday afternoon that his office had arrested 14 people in connection with a major drug-fighting initiative.

Dozens of officers executed search warrants in the early morning hours.

They seized six kilos of heroin and fentanyl, two kilos of cocaine, five handguns, one rifle, $200,000 cash, a kilo press, scales, and packaging equipment.



The law enforcement effort was the result of a three-month wiretap investigation into a drug trafficking organization in the Kensington neighborhood.

Shapiro told reporters at a new conference in Harrowgate Plaza that the effort prevented three shootings from happening in the course of a few weeks.

The Kensington initiative is a partnership between local, state, and federal law enforcement to target major criminal drug organizations in the neighborhood.

On Tuesday morning, agents executed 20 search warrants on homes and warehouses and vehicles believed to be connected to the organization.

The ring had ties to reaching as far as Allentown to the north and Bucks County to the east. More search warrants were executed in those areas.

Officials announce 14 arrests in Kensington drug bust


Shapiro said the ringleaders used school children to sell the drugs on street corners.

"Kensington is a neighborhood ravaged by the heroin, opioid, and fentanyl epidemics, and criminal organizations such as the one we shut down today are fueling the crisis. While the ringleaders were jetting off to award shows and expensive restaurants, they were also ravaging the lives of those in our community," he said.

Shapiro added, "I'm grateful for the hard work of our law enforcement partners in the Kensington Initiative to shut down this dangerous organization and make our streets safer for the families, children, and seniors who live there."
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