Jeremy Mercier was arrested after turning up at a Maine restaurant, asking about a large wooden crate that had randomly arrived. Photo / AP
Employees of a Maine restaurant got a surprise when they opened a large wooden crate that they thought was a shipment of mugs they had recently ordered.
Instead, they found a plastic tote that contained what law enforcement suspect is 14kg of the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl with an estimated
street value of US$3 million ($4.8m), Auburn police Deputy Chief Timothy Cougle said in a statement.
The tote had a shipping label with the restaurant’s address but the name of someone who did not work there. Employees who opened it saw what they thought looked like drugs, so they contacted police, Cougle said.
The crate from Arizona that arrived in the Maine town about 50km north of Portland was taken to the police department, where a chemical field examination confirmed it contained fentanyl.
About an hour later, the man whose name was on the shipment showed up looking for the crate and was arrested, police said.