Modesto, Turlock Raid Seizes 2,700 Pounds of Meth in Major Northern California Bust
A sweeping narcotics case tied to Modesto, Turlock, and Valley Springs has turned into one of the biggest drug bust stories in Northern California this year. Authorities say a coordinated operation seized roughly 2,700 pounds of methamphetamine, along with marijuana, firearms, and ammunition, and led to eight arrests.
Officials say the case, dubbed Operation Trash Panda, was the result of a five-month investigation led by the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Enforcement Unit with help from federal, state, and local partners. Search warrants were served on Feb. 27 at properties in Valley Springs, Turlock, and Modesto, with more than 100 law enforcement personnel involved in the operation.
How the investigation started
According to investigators, the case began in October 2025 after deputies responded to an illegal dumping complaint in a remote part of Calaveras County. Authorities say suspicious materials found at that scene triggered a broader narcotics investigation that eventually led detectives to multiple properties connected to what they describe as a large drug trafficking organization operating across Northern California.
That origin story is part of what makes this case stand out: what started as a dumping complaint allegedly exposed a much larger pipeline tied to methamphetamine manufacturing, storage, and distribution. That broader theory has been repeated across multiple reports covering the raid.
What authorities say they found
Investigators reported seizing about 1,500 pounds of finished methamphetamine and another 1,270 pounds of suspected methamphetamine in a partially processed state, pending laboratory confirmation. Officials also reported recovering about 1,900 marijuana plants, roughly 107 pounds of processed marijuana, 12 firearms, and more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition.
Authorities described the seizure as the largest methamphetamine seizure in the history of the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office. The DEA also said it was the largest methamphetamine seizure in the history of the DEA San Francisco Division.
Why Modesto and Turlock matter in this case
Even though the investigation was led out of Calaveras County, the Stanislaus County locations gave the case major local relevance. Search warrants were executed at residential properties in both Modesto and Turlock, and officials say those sites were tied to the broader operation investigators were tracking.
Some reports went further, saying investigators believe the operation involved an active meth lab in Valley Springs, a planned lab in Turlock, and a distribution site in Modesto. Those details help explain why the case drew such a large response and why multiple jurisdictions were involved.
Arrests and the watch list detail
Authorities said eight people were taken into federal and state custody. Officials have not publicly released all of the names or the final list of charges. The case is currently being reviewed by the Calaveras County District Attorney’s Office and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of California to determine the most appropriate state and federal charges.
One of the biggest details drawing attention is that officials said one of the people arrested was on the National Terrorist Watch List. Authorities have not publicly explained that person’s exact role in the case, and no additional identifying details had been released in the reports reviewed.
Agencies involved
This was not a routine single-agency bust. Participating agencies included the DEA, FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, the Sacramento Area Intelligence Narcotics Team, the Merced Area Gang and Narcotics Enforcement Team, HIDTA, and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, among others. The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office also reportedly played a major operational role and deployed a helicopter during the warrant service.
That level of coordination is one reason officials have described the case as a major disruption of an alleged narcotics supply chain rather than a simple local arrest operation.
Why this story is bigger than one bust
This case matters not only because of the raw amount of drugs seized, but because officials believe they dismantled part of a network tied to manufacturing and distributing methamphetamine across multiple counties. If the allegations hold up in court, the operation would represent a significant hit to a trafficking pipeline reaching beyond one city or neighborhood.
Investigators say the case remains active and ongoing, and additional arrests, charges, or forfeiture actions could still follow.
Quick summary for readers
Search warrants were served in Modesto, Turlock, and Valley Springs.
Authorities say they seized roughly 2,700 pounds of methamphetamine.
Officers also reported finding marijuana plants, processed marijuana, firearms, and ammunition.
Eight people were arrested, and one was reportedly on the National Terrorist Watch List.
Officials say the investigation began after an illegal dumping complaint in Calaveras County.]
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