Local Man Busted With 1,500 Bags Of Uncut Fentanyl, Police Say


By Keith Heffintrayer | North Penn Now

Naim Payton
Credit: Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office

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A Lower Bucks County man is facing drug trafficking charges after county detectives allegedly found 1,500 bags of uncut fentanyl during a drug bust in Pottstown Borough, Montgomery County.

Naim Payton, 23, of the Morrisville section of Falls Township, has been charged with felony possession with intent to distribute, as well as misdemeanor counts of possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana, in connection with the investigation. He is currently in custody at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility in lieu of $99,000 cash bail.

Members of the Montgomery County Detective Bureau learned that Payton would be in the Pottstown area on April 25 to sell a large quantity of uncut fentanyl, according to charging documents. Detectives spotted Payton arriving to the 400 block of North Evans Street and initiated a traffic stop that ultimately uncovered 1,500 bags of uncut fentanyl, police said.

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The 1,500 bags were packaged into 10-baggie bundles, then five bundles were packaged into a โ€œbrick,โ€ and five โ€œbricksโ€ were then packaged together into a โ€œrack,โ€ investigators said. The street value of the fentanyl was approximately $20,000, according to the district attorneyโ€™s office.

โ€œFentanyl is continuing to kill Montgomery County residents at an alarming rate, even as methamphetamine is becoming more prevalent throughout southeastern Pennsylvania. This significant arrest and seizure will make Montgomery County a safer place,โ€ said Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele. โ€œThe message is clear to drug dealers: no matter what poison you are sellingโ€”fentanyl, opioids, heroin or methamphetamine โ€” donโ€™t do it in Montgomery County.โ€

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Naim was arraigned by District Judge Scott Palladino on April 26, who set bail at $150,000 cash. Montgomery County Pre-Trial Services reviewed the bail the following day and lowered it to $99,000 cash, effectively taking Payton out of administrative segregation in county jail and placing him into general population.

Editorโ€™s Note: All individuals arrested or charged with a crime are presumed innocent until proven guilty. The story was compiled using information from police and public court documents.

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