Fort Wayne Feds Bust Multi-Site Meth, Fentanyl Trafficking Ring
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (Day.News) — Law enforcement from the FBI, Indiana State Police and local agencies executed search warrants at five Fort Wayne locations Tuesday, including homes in the Autumn Ridge subdivision on Baywood Trail, Taylor Street, Voyager Drive and Piedmont Cove, plus an auto body shop on Wallace Street. The raids targeted a methamphetamine, fentanyl, cocaine and heroin distribution ring operating across central Indiana, as detailed in unsealed federal indictments from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana.
Juan Gonzalez and an associate identified in court transcripts as linked to the Baywood Trail residence face charges of possession with intent to distribute heroin, cocaine and marijuana from January through recent months. The auto body shop, registered to one of the suspects, served as a front for drug activities. This operation echoes a larger 2022 multi-state bust led from Indianapolis, where 21 defendants including Fort Wayne residents Jerry Bibbs, 54, and Emmanuel O’Hara, 24, were indicted for fentanyl, meth and cocaine conspiracies, resulting in seizures of two kilograms of fentanyl, one kilogram of cocaine, four ounces of meth, 43 firearms and $300,000 cash.
The Fort Wayne raids form part of the FBI's Safe Streets Task Force, a year-long probe culminating in 21 charges announced by U.S. Attorney Thomas Kirsch. Indiana State Police led the warrant services alongside federal partners. This follows a massive August 2025 sentencing of 11 Central Indiana traffickers under Jaraughn Bertram, who imported 78 kilograms of fentanyl and 118 pounds of meth from Arizona to Indianapolis, Anderson and Muncie, yielding 128 firearms, 61 machine gun converters and $722,626 in cash.
These busts highlight Fort Wayne's role in Indiana's drug corridors, with northeast Indiana communities like Allen County increasingly hit by meth and fentanyl flows from California and Arizona. Defendants face decades in federal prison if convicted, amid Hoosier overdose deaths surpassing 2,000 annually in recent years.
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