Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jun 2006 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2006 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Jim Schaefer, Free Press Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DETROIT FENTANYL SUSPECT IN COURT He Faces Drug, Weapons Charges A Detroit man whom authorities have called a significant dealer of a deadly form of heroin had a basement laboratory and an armory to defend it, according to court records reviewed Saturday. Daren Reese, 45, was arraigned on drug and weapons charges Saturday in Detroit's 36th District Court. Court records indicate that in an earlier raid on Reese's home just northwest of I-94 and the Lodge Freeway, officers found 63 grams of suspected heroin and an undetermined amount of a crystallized white powder believed to be fentanyl, a prescription painkiller being mixed on the streets with heroin to create a more intense -- and potentially lethal -- high. Officers said they didn't weigh the white powder at the scene because of health concerns. The substances were found in Reese's basement, along with powdered cutting agents, about 100 grams of suspected marijuana, coffee grinders with suspected heroin residue, protective face masks, aluminum foil packets, razor blades, sifters and numerous Ziploc-type baggies, according to an investigator's report contained in Reese's court file. Authorities also reported finding a loaded 12-gauge Mossberg shotgun with a pistol grip, and a bullet-resistant vest. Upstairs, officers found an unspecified amount of more suspected heroin in a kitchen cabinet and three loaded pistols -- one by the front door and two in the master bedroom. There also was $5,500 in cash and 21.2 grams of suspected marijuana near the bed. Reese lives in the 1200 block of Elijah McCoy, near the Jeffries housing project, where authorities say he kept street dealers supplied with drugs. The raid followed Reese's arrest in a traffic stop earlier Thursday. Wayne County Sheriff's deputies and federal agents had been watching him after receiving information from a drug user who was found unconscious in a car recently in Highland Park. The 22-year-old suburban woman, whom authorities have not identified, cooperated in the hunt for the source of fentanyl-laced heroin, a plague in several areas of the country and the cause of about 130 deaths in Wayne County since 2005. Officers said they found 83 packets of drugs in Reese's pocket after they pulled over his 2006 Cadillac in Detroit. Tests later confirmed the packets contained fentanyl and heroin, court records show. On Saturday, Reese was ordered held on $200,000 cash bond during his arraignment on 10 charges involving drugs and weapons. Reese, who has past convictions related to drugs and robbery, also is charged with being a habitual offender. Wayne County assistant prosecutor Karen Plants had asked Magistrate Sidney Barthwell Jr. for an even higher cash bond -- $500,000 -- contending Reese was dangerous. "This gentleman is the latest incarnation of Dr. Death," Plants said in court Reese's lawyer, Paul Curtis of Detroit, objected to Plants' remarks as "scurrilous and inflammatory," but Barthwell agreed with Plants and ordered a significant bond. A group of people apparently in court to see Reese did not comment as they left the building. Afterward, Curtis defended his client, saying: "What's going on is politics going on." Sheriff Warren Evans, who met with reporters after the arraignment, said Reese was a mid-level supplier to street dealers, and that his arrest will make a dent in drug dealing, particularly around the Jeffries project. But, Evans warned: "This is not a time for people to think this is over. ...It's a scourge." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman