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Toronto

Police seize 78 guns, to lay more than 1,000 charges after street gang raids

Toronto police arrested 75 people and seized 78 firearms after a series of raids targeting the street gang 5 Point Generalz. We are confident that we have arrested the highest ranking members of the organization," said an inspector.

Police seized 60 guns in the trunk of a car going from Cornwall, Ont. to Toronto

Toronto police seized 78 firearms as a result of the raids. (Paul Smith/CBC)

Toronto police have seized 78 guns, $1.2 million in drugs and expect to lay more than 1,000 charges after a seriesof raids targeting a violent street gang.

Investigators say the operation, dubbed Project Patton, led to the arrests of 75 people connected to the FivePoint Generalz.

Police carried out the raids earlyThursday at locations inToronto,Durham, York and Peel regions.

"We are confident that we have arrested the highest ranking members of the organization," DonaldBelanger, acting inspector of the Integrated Gun andGang Task Force, said Friday.

Toronto police deputy chief Jim Ramersaid the gang was "involved in extensive guns and drug activity," including murders, attempted murders, firearm trafficking, drug trafficking andsexual assault.

The charges, however, mostly centre around trafficking, unlawful possession of guns and participation in a criminal organization.

The seized drugs are estimated to be worth around $1.2 million. They included cocaine, fentanyl, carfentanil and heroin. (Paul Smith/CBC)

60 guns taken in single seizure

Police said 60 of the guns were seized around a month ago from a car that was going fromCornwall, Ont. to Toronto.

They saidthe guns were originally purchased in Floridaand were bound to be used and trafficked on Toronto streets. It was the largest single weapons seizure in the force's history,

"I can report that this gun smuggling operation has now been dismantled," ActingInsp.Belangersaid.

The weapons were found inside the trunk of a single car, although investigators would not say exactly where the car was stopped. Police believe that some of guns would have been distributed to Five Point Generalzand others sold.

Police seized $184,000 in cash. (Paul Smith/CBC)

The handguns, which cost around $500 in Florida, could have been sold for around $4,000 each in Toronto.

"Clean guns demand more than dirty guns," Belangerexplained.

Toronto police worked with Canadian border services and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,Firearms and Explosives during that portion of the operation.

Colourful guns 'look like toys'

The weapons also included multiple brightly-coloured handguns, "many of which look like toys," Belanger said.

He added that Toronto police have seen those types of weapons before, but never on such a large scale.

Several colourful, toy-like guns were seized in the raids, but police said every single one is a real firearm. (Paul Smith/CBC)

The weapons can pose problems to officers on the streets, police said, since they may not appear to be a genuine firearms.

When he first saw the seizure, Ramerremarked that some ofthe guns "looklike a water pistol my granddaughter has."

In Thursday's raids, police also found a gun workshop, featuring tools and parts to assemble at least four additional firearms.