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Delta police fentanyl investigation leads to Burnaby bust

An investigation that began in Delta led to a substantial fentanyl bust in Burnaby on Thursday and the execution of additional search warrants in Richmond and Surrey.

Delta police say several kilograms of fentanyl were seized and 2 men were arrested

Part of a quiet Burnaby townhouse and apartment complex was behind police tape on Friday, after police seized a sizeable quantity of fentanyl from one of the units. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

A drug investigation that began in Delta led to a substantial fentanyl bust in Burnaby on Thursday, and additional search warrants executed at properties inRichmond and Surrey.

Sgt. Sarah Swallow with the Delta Police Department said two men were arrested late Thursday in connection to the three properties searched.

"Warrants were executed atall of those properties, and when they entered this property here in Burnaby, they found a large fentanyl lab," said Swallow on Friday. "It wasn't a manufacturing lab, or production lab, it was a lab where fentanyl was taken and turned into a street-ready drug ...It sounds like a packaging or processing lab."

Swallow wasn't sure how much of the drug had been seized, but she said it could be measured in kilograms, rather than grams or ounces.

The RCMP's federally fundedClandestine Laboratory Enforcement and Response, orCLEAR team,could be seen working in the taped-off area in a townhouse and apartment complex near the 7400-block of Magnolia Terrace in Burnaby on Friday.

Members of the RCMP Clandestine Lab Enforcement and Response team and the Burnaby Fire Department's hazardous materials team work behind police tape on Friday. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

The BurnabyFire Department's hazardous materials team and paramedics with B.C. Emergency Health Services were standing by in case of an emergency.

"Anytime there's a HAZMAT response, we assist the police agencies and we work really well with that to provide the [decontamination] and the [rapid intervention team], as well," said Dave Samson, a staff officer with theBurnaby Fire Department.

"The word we've got from the police is [we'll be here]two to three days,"he said. "It's fairly typical for a [clandestine] lab of this type of thing. It takes them awhile; they have to go through their procedures, so we're just here to assist them and protect them, as well asthe public."

Burnaby RCMP had patrol cruisers and a mobile command unit parked in the 6800-block of Prenter Street on Friday, as investigators pored over a clandestine fentanyl facility. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Quiet, residential neighbourhood

Zereno, 12, who only gave his first name, lives across the street. He and his stepmotherwere surprised to see the police activity in their otherwise quiet neighbourhood.

"It's kind of scary, but it's a good thing that the cops found out and busted them," he said."It's not that good at all, and people shouldn't use [fentanyl]or anything, because they might die."

Neighbours in this quiet Burnaby neighbourhood say "it's kind of scary" that a drug processing facility was found in on of the apartments, now behind police tape. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Overdose deaths

According to a Delta Police Departmentstatement, there were 471 deaths in Canada in 2015directly connected to fentanyl. There have already been 132 fentanyl deaths across the country this year.

"What I hear from the drug experts is that a couple grains of fentanyl about the size of rice, or the size of salt, can cause somebody to overdose," said Swallow.

"I don't know if it was going on here, but what typically the people that do this do, is they take the fentanyl, they dye it a brown colour so it looks like heroin, then they add a vinegary smell to it," she said. "It makes it look very like heroin, then they sell it with heroin, or they sell it on its own as fake heroin."

Surrey first responders work to revive an opiate overdose patient in this file photo from October. The patient and another who collapsed nearby both survived. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)