A Lafayette Parish drug investigation is drawing attention after sheriff’s narcotics agents said a traffic stop led to a wider search and several arrests. The public details are still limited, but the matter already carries serious weight locally for nearby residents.
The investigation centers on University Avenue, where agents say one stop later connected to another location in Lafayette Parish. For now, the important point is simple: what began on the road quickly became a broader narcotics inquiry that remains active.
The investigation began Thursday night just after 9:00 p.m., when Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Narcotics Agents stopped a vehicle for a traffic violation in the 1100 block of University Ave. That ordinary starting point quickly became something more serious for agents.
During the interaction, agents found drug paraphernalia and nearly $55,000 in cash inside the vehicle. Cash alone does not prove trafficking, but paired with paraphernalia during a narcotics investigation, it gave agents reason to keep pressing the case that night.
Jonathan Torres, 31, and Anthony Caro, 37, were arrested at the traffic stop, according to the report. Their arrests show how fast a roadside violation can turn into a felony drug case once agents say evidence appears inside the vehicle.
A short time after the traffic stop, Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Narcotics Agents executed a search warrant in the 1700 block of University Ave. That second location moved the investigation off the roadway and into a place agents believed was tied to the same narcotics case.
At that location, agents reported finding nearly 8 pounds of fentanyl and more than $5,000 in cash. The fentanyl amount is the central public safety concern here, because even small amounts can be dangerous when handled or sold improperly.
Joseph Robicheaux, 31, and Leon Boutte, 42, were arrested at the second location where the warrant was executed. Their arrests show how the case expanded from one vehicle stop into a broader Lafayette Parish investigation involving separate people and separate evidence.
Jonathan Torres, 31, and Anthony Caro, 37, were charged with Distribution of Schedule II Controlled Dangerous Substances, Transactions Involving Proceeds from Drug Offenses, and Prohibited Acts. Those charges connect the traffic stop evidence to alleged drug distribution and money movement.
Joseph Robicheaux, 31, and Leon Boutte, 42, were charged with Distribution of Schedule II Controlled Dangerous Substances and Transactions Involving Proceeds from Drug Offenses. Their charges came from the second University Avenue location, where agents reported fentanyl and cash inside.
The case remains under investigation by Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Narcotics Agents, and officials said no further information was available. That leaves open questions about testing, evidence links between both locations, and whether more details will be released as the investigation moves forward.
Debate around Lafayette Parish cases like this often centers on how a routine traffic violation can open the door to a much larger narcotics inquiry. Here, the key question is whether agents can clearly connect the 1100 and 1700 blocks of University Ave.
Next steps will depend on what investigators release after the active review, especially lab confirmation and court filings. The Schedule II distribution and drug proceeds charges now have to move from sheriff’s allegations into evidence a judge can examine in Lafayette Parish.