Police swarmed downtown Los Angeles’s notorious MacArthur Park Thursday to bust addicts who flock to the open-air drug market to use in broad daylight.
The California Post watched as dozens cops set upon the once-proud park’s tragic turf, tackling cleanup of the eyesore that LA Mayor Karen Bass boasted about hosting viewing parties for the World Cup in just a few weeks.

Officers immediately targeted stupefied park-goers open smoking fentanyl near the litter strewn corner Alvarado and Seventh streets, placing several in handcuffs and hauling them away as others scurried from the scene.
Previous operations by police and fedneral agents zeroed in on MacArthur Park’s dealers and suppliers.
Once known as the Champs-Élysées of Los Angeles, MacArthur Park dates to the 1880’s and is bisected by Wilshire Avenue. Amenities include a lake, a bandshell and tennis courts.
The park fell on hard times in the 1980’s as drug dealers and gangs moved in, with as many as 30 murders occurring there in 1990. Today it’s an epicenter for homelessness and drug addictions, with throngs of users buying fentanyl and meth there each day.

The LAPD’s Gang and Narcotics Division put the park’s dealers on notice in March, as officers arrested several leaders of the city’s notorious 18th Street Gang, which controlled drugs sales on one side of the park.
Among those arrested was suspected 18th Street head of operations Keiko Gonzalez, better known as“Moms,” on racketeering and murder charges.
During the monthlong investigation leading up to the dramatic bust, agents seized more than 175lbs of meth and fentanyl, $80,000 in cash and six firearms.
The very next day, officers and FBI agents once again hit the park, this time searching storefronts on Alvardo Street that operated as drug dens for the 18th Street Gang’s dealers.
That night, officers recovered a garbage bag filled with cash and fentanyl from one of the drug hot spots there.

In May, DEA agents led yet another raid of the park’s deadly drug trade, with dozens of agents carrying out a series of arrests targeting the leadership of the prison-based Mexican Mafia, which supplied dope to the park’s dealers via Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.
Wednesday’s sweep heralded another chapter in the crackdown on the drug trade. Essayli said officers will now commence regular sweeps of the park to arrest addicts who until recently used drugs there with impunity.
“We’re actually arresting people for using drugs in the park,” said Essayli. “That’s something that hasn’t happened for a long time.”
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