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Florida deputies seize enough fentanyl to kill nearly 40,000 people during traffic stop

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AVON PARK -- A traffic stop in Avon Park on Sunday led to what the Highlands County Sheriff's Office calls one of the largest drug seizures in recent memory in their county. Deputies confiscated enough fentanyl to kill nearly 40,000 people, as well as over a pound of heroin and nearly a pound of cocaine.

Around 7:40 p.m., Deputy Seth Abeln saw a blue Ford Focus on North Central Avenue that had a tag light out. After Abeln stopped the vehicle, Deputy Ben Jones and K-9 Gentry were called to do a free air sniff of the vehicle. According to the sheriff's office, Gentry indicated there were drugs in the car.

A search of the vehicle turned up:

● 554 grams of heroin

● 450 grams of cocaine

● 99.6 grams of fentanyl

● 975 oxycodone pills

● 107 Xanax pills

● 90 vape pens with liquid THC

The sheriff's office says a dose of 2-3 milligrams of fentanyl is enough to be deadly, meaning there was enough of the drug to kill 40,000 people using 2.5 milligrams as a fatal dose. To put that in perspective, that would be enough to kill nearly 40 percent of the people in Highlands County.

The street value of the fentanyl is $15,000. Add that to the $20,000 of cocaine, $40,000 of oxycodone and $45,000 of heroin, and the total seizure is worth $120,000 on the street, not including the value of the vape pens.

There was also a loaded handgun inside the car. deputies say. The driver, 40-year-old Ruben Ramirez-Rivera, was arrested and charged with:

● trafficking cocaine

● trafficking heroin

● trafficking oxycodone

● trafficking a controlled substance

● possession of opium or a derivative (fentanyl) with intent to sell/deliver

● possession of a Schedule III or IV drug with intent to sell/deliver

● possession of heroin with intent to sell/deliver

● possession of cocaine with intent to sell/deliver

● felony possession of marijuana

● possession of a weapon during commission of a first-degree felony

● possession of drug equipment

Rivera is being held without bond at the Highlands County Jail.

“I’m very proud of the work done by the deputies involved in this arrest,” Sheriff Paul Blackman said. “To take this amount of drugs off the street is a huge accomplishment, and our county is safer because of it.”