Federal agents raided a southeast Houston apartment on Monday and walked out with what amounts to a small warehouse worth of contraband: roughly 40 pounds of methamphetamine, more than 100 pounds of marijuana, cocaine, about 20 grams of fentanyl and 17 firearms. Authorities characterized the haul as distribution-level, not personal use. The seizure was made public late Monday through the DEA’s Houston account on X.
Seized from a Southeast Houston apartment were 40 lbs. of meth, 17 firearms, cocaine, over 100 lbs. of marijuana, and 20 grams of fentanyl. Thanks to the @houstonpolice and @TxDPSSoutheast for their assistance. @DEAHQ @TheJusticeDept https://x.com/i/status/2036216824556032099
— DEA Houston (@DEAHouston) March 23, 2026
Agency post
The DEA’s Houston office kept its public update short and to the point. In a brief notice on X, the account listed the drugs and weapons seized and thanked partner agencies for backing up the operation. As posted by DEAHouston, the agency wrote, “Seized from a Southeast Houston apartment were 40 lbs. of meth, 17 firearms, cocaine, over 100 lbs. of marijuana, and 20 grams of fentanyl.”
Why the haul matters
The quantities involved are not just eye-catching on paper. Fentanyl and meth have been at the center of the DEA Houston Field Division’s enforcement focus, in part because tiny amounts of fentanyl can be deadly. The division reported seizing the equivalent of more than 7 million potentially lethal fentanyl doses in 2022, underscoring why even 20 grams gets serious attention, according to the agency.
At the state level, the Texas Department of Public Safety recently highlighted how large-scale trafficking remains active across Texas. Earlier this month, DPS reported intercepting nearly 2,000 pounds of methamphetamine during a traffic stop, a reminder that massive shipments continue to move through the state even as federal and local agencies notch big busts like the Houston apartment seizure.
Legal implications
When large drug quantities are found alongside a cache of firearms, it typically sets up a federal case that is about more than simple possession. Prosecutors commonly pursue possession with intent to distribute, coupled with firearms charges that can trigger mandatory minimums and long prison terms. Recent actions by the Justice Department in the Houston area have paired drug and gun allegations in complex trafficking prosecutions, signaling federal lawyers are prepared to stack serious counts when weapons and distribution-level drugs show up together…