WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) – A North Carolina sheriff’s office thought it made a huge drug bust, seizing 13 pounds of fentanyl worth $2 million on the street.
The powder was found in a home along with other drugs and paraphernalia.
A field test indicated it was the powerful opioid, justifying a host of charges against three suspects.
Most of those charges soon evaporated when a state lab concluded that whatever the powder was, it wasn’t fentanyl.
The sheriff’s office then sent the powder to a private lab, and the results arrived this week.
New Hanover Sheriff’s Lt. Jerry Brewer tells WECT-TV that the powder seized in July includes no illicit ingredients, and is nothing more than “a combination of simple and complex carbohydrates.”
In other words, sugar, worth about $8 at the grocery store.
- HEADLESS TORSO FOUND INSIDE FISH TANK OF SAN FRANCISCO HOME
- BILL TO MAKE CALIFORNIA FIRST STATE TO END BAIL BEFORE TRIAL
- TEACHER FACES $108K HOSPITAL BILL AFTER SUFFERING HEART ATTACK
- TEEN MISSING FOR MORE THAN A YEAR FOUND SAFE
- DOG SITTING GONE WILD: OWNER FINDS SHIRTLESS MEN, LUBE IN HOME