Malcom Perkins, 69, of New Orleans, was arrested after St. Charles and Jefferson Parish sheriff’s offices worked a joint drug investigation. Authorities described the case as a multi-agency matter involving suspected narcotics, firearms, and cash found during the investigation.
Officials said the case came from cooperation between parishes, with investigators continuing to review what was seized and how the evidence fits together now.
The case began as a joint investigation between the St. Charles Parish Sheriff’s Office and the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office. That matters because drug cases can cross parish lines, and shared work can help investigators compare leads, locations, and suspected activity.
Authorities said the investigation led to 69-year-old Malcom Perkins of New Orleans. He was arrested in St. Charles Parish on Wednesday, July 1, after deputies said he was found with illegal firearms and several suspected drugs in his possession.
The sheriff’s office said the seized items included crack, cocaine, and fentanyl, but the arrest itself does not end the work. Investigators still have to document where the items came from, who handled them, and what the evidence can prove.
Deputies said Perkins was found with $59,516 worth of illegal firearms, crack, cocaine, and fentanyl on Wednesday, July 1. That dollar figure matters because it moves the case beyond a small amount and points to what investigators viewed as distribution-related evidence.
The sheriff’s office did not provide detailed weights for each drug in the public report, so the safest reading is simple. As already mentioned, investigators identified crack, cocaine, and fentanyl as part of the seizure, with firearms included in the same drug investigation.
That combination carries obvious risk, especially because fentanyl can be dangerous in very small amounts. When firearms and multiple drugs appear together, deputies usually look at more than possession, including storage, movement, money, and possible sales activity.
Perkins is facing two counts of distribution of cocaine, according to the St. Charles Parish Sheriff’s Office. In plain terms, those charges accuse him of selling or delivering cocaine, not only having it nearby when deputies made the arrest that day.
He also faces attempted distribution of cocaine and possession with intent to distribute cocaine. Those are separate ideas in court language. One looks at an alleged effort to distribute, while the other focuses on what deputies believe the cocaine was meant for.
Perkins is also charged with transactions involving proceeds from CDS, which means investigators allege money was connected to controlled dangerous substances. That charge matters because it turns attention to the cash side of the case, not only the drugs themselves.
Debate around this arrest will likely focus on how parishes balance enforcement with prevention. Crack, cocaine, fentanyl, firearms, and $59,516 make the public safety concern clear, but arrests alone do not explain how supply keeps moving between communities over time.
The next chapters should come through court filings, prosecutor decisions, and any added details from St. Charles Parish investigators. Perkins faces several cocaine-related charges, but the larger question is how the joint investigation connects the money, firearms, and drugs.