Rayne police say an early-morning drug raid has now been linked to a deadly overdose, and the man they arrested is facing a second-degree murder charge on top of a stack of narcotics and weapons counts.
Officers took Joseph Anthony Roy Jr. into custody early Tuesday after a run of suspected overdoses that left one adult man dead. Investigators say the drugs involved traced back to a Crandall Avenue home that was later searched. Inside, officers reported finding suspected methamphetamine and cocaine, a 9mm handgun, digital scales and other paraphernalia. Police also say the house was in rough shape and that some narcotics were stored in places where children could easily get to them.
According to KADN News, the case kicked off when officers responded to separate medical emergencies on Feb. 21 and 22, one of which turned fatal. Detectives say witness interviews and digital forensics helped them zero in on a suspected primary source of narcotics believed to be laced with fentanyl, which pointed them to the Crandall Avenue address.
What Officers Say They Found Inside
Police report that the search warrant was served around 3 a.m. Tuesday. Inside, officers say they recovered quantities of methamphetamine and cocaine, a 9mm firearm and ammunition, as well as digital scales and packaging materials consistent with drug distribution, along with other drug paraphernalia, according to KATC. Based on what they found, authorities booked Roy on second-degree murder, possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and cocaine, illegal carrying of a weapon in the presence of a controlled dangerous substance, cruelty to juveniles and possession of drug paraphernalia.
How Louisiana Law Makes Overdoses A Murder Case
Under Louisiana law, prosecutors do not have to prove a traditional homicide to file a second-degree murder charge in cases like this. The state’s statute says second-degree murder covers deaths caused when someone unlawfully distributes a controlled dangerous substance that is the direct cause of the recipient’s death, as laid out in La. R.S. 14:30.1. The drug-dealing counts fall under La. R.S. 40:967, which sets penalties for possession with intent to distribute based on the type and amount of narcotics, and will guide how the case is prosecuted if charges move forward…