Opioid takedown in West Virginia and Michigan leads to dozens arrested

Federal officials says almost 100 people were targeted.

More than a dozen people, including two major distributors, were arrested in a sweeping opioid crackdown Tuesday in West Virginia and Michigan involving hundreds of federal, state and local law enforcement officers, officials said.

Investigators said they discovered that the Peterson organization had been in operation for almost 15 years, trafficking large quantities of heroin, fentanyl and cocaine from suppliers in Detroit to street dealers in Huntington. Leader Willie Peterson was arrested in Detroit, while his brother, Manget Peterson, was arrested in Huntington, officials said.

Operation Saigon Sunset, part of a broader U.S. government opioid enforcement initiative, comes as West Virginia continues to lead the U.S. in the rate of deaths due to drug overdose: 52 out of every 100,000, according to the most recent publicly-available data from the CDC. In Nebraska, the state with the lowest rate, about six people out of every 100,000 die from drug overdoses.

Mike Stuart, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Virginia, said Tuesday’s action is a sign that the U.S. government’s efforts against the opioid epidemic are working.

“Today is a turning point for the City of Huntington and in the war against the opiate nightmare,” he said. “We still have to do but the days of havoc, chaos and misery caused by the peddlers of illicit poisons are soon to be over.”