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Quebec City police seize $1.5M worth of fentanyl

Police have seized an 'unprecedented' amount of the opioid fentanyl in a series of raids in March and early April in Quebec City.

Restricted opioid linked to respiratory distress and fatal overdoses across North America

Police seized two types of fentanyl pills, including this one stamped with the inscription A215. (Quebec City police)

Quebec City have policeseized an "unprecedented" amountof the opioid fentanyl in a series of raids in March and early April.

Investigators said more than 76,000 pills and a kilogram of fentanylpowder,with a street value of more than$1.5 million dollars, was seized in more than a dozen busts in Quebec City.

Five people have beenarrested in connection with the operation.

Police in Quebec City said two types of tablets were among the drugs seized: one with the inscription A215, which goes by the street name "petite bleue," and another marked CDN100.

Fentanylis anopioiddrug which is40 times stronger than heroin and between 50 and100 times more potent than morphine.The drug has been linked to dozens of overdoses and several deaths across Quebec and Canadainthe last two years.

Police seized more than 76,000 fentanyl pills in a series of raids in April and May. (Quebec City police)

The drug can cause respiratory distress and death. Last summer, Quebec Citypublichealth officials linked 11 overdoses, including three deaths, to fentanyl.

It has also been linked to a string of fatal overdoses in Montreal.

Until recently, the painkiller was only available in a prescription skin patch,designed to slowly release the drug over 72 hours.

However, in the last five years, illicit drug users discovered the prescriptionnarcotic could be chewed, smoked, injected or otherwise consumed.

Health officials say it's been present in the illegal drug trade in Quebec for about two years.

TheCanadian Centre on Substance Abuse saidusers of fentanyl have little understanding of how poisonous the drug is.

Astudy released by the centre in August found one Canadian died every three days from afentanyl-relatedoverdose.