Advertisement

Arrests made in local heroin/cocaine operation

June 07, 2009|By Veronica RochaValley Sun

Four men were arrested Thursday on suspicion of trafficking more than $340,000 worth of heroin and cocaine, part of which police said was intended to supply a growing demand among teens in La Crescenta.

Detectives discovered more than two pounds of powder heroin hidden inside the dashboard of a Sun Valley man¹s car, and found another two pounds of cocaine, a handgun and thousands of dollars in cash inside a North Hollywood home after following it there, Glendale Police Sgt. Scott Johnstone said.

"This heroin, after it is packaged for sale on the street, is valued at over $100,000," Johnstone said.

Advertisement

The Vice and Narcotics Unit got a tip that linked an alleged drug dealer Girardo Mendoza, 46, of Sun Valley to a home in La Crescenta, so Johnstone said detectives began monitoring him.

They followed him to Sun Valley, where they saw a him and Jesus Hernandez, 23, of San Fernando reportedly exchange drugs, he said.

When detectives approached the pair, they found a bag of drugs and cash in plain view inside Hernandez¹s vehicle, Johnstone said.

But when detectives searched Hernandez's car, they found more than two pounds of powder heroin in a compartment under the dashboard, he said.

Detectives went to Hernandez's North Hollywood home on Tujunga Avenue and found bags of cocaine, a handgun and thousands of dollars inside a bedroom, where Samuel Montes, 24, of North Hollywood, lived with his 21-year-old wife and 9-month-old baby, officials said.

They arrested Montes and Refugio Montes, 37, of Glendale, in a rear bedroom on suspicion of possessing and selling drugs, Johnstone said.

The cocaine located at the Tujunga Avenue address had a street value of more than $240,000, he said.

The bust occurred out of the Glendale area because the men were selling drugs to local teens and residents.

Heroin use among teens in La Crescenta is a growing problem, leading to an increase in other crimes and broken families, Johnstone said. "It¹s surging," he said. "Years ago, you never saw heroin. It was the drug of choice for a middle-aged person who lived on the street."

But demographics have changed and younger adults are quickly getting hooked to the powerful stimulant, Johnstone said. Most teens aren¹t injecting heroin into their bloodstream and are smoking the drug instead, he said.

"I have had parents pleading for help because their sons and daughters, who are at high school age, are addicted to heroin," Johnstone said.

Many teens become addicted to the drugs after smoking marijuana laced with heroin.

"It¹s just a powerful drug that the city has never seen before," he said. Most heroin arrests are linked to La Crescenta, Johnstone said.

Nearly 90% of Det. Dave Kellogg¹s cases are heroin related, he said.

"Over the past four years, the increase I have seen, I would have to say is epidemic," Kellogg said. "I have seen male teens...destroy themselves." Heroin use has increased so much that he said he can¹t keep up with it.

La Canada Valley Sun Articles
|
|
|