DEA agents converge along Alvarado Avenue near MacArthur Park targeting an open-air drug market during “Operation Free MacArthur Park,” where authorities arrested 18 people, including two people believed to be the main sources of fentanyl and methamphetamine in the park in Los Angeles on May 6, 2026. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
A two-month undercover Drug Enforcement Administration investigation exposed what federal authorities say is a Sinaloa Cartel-linked drug trafficking operation funneling fentanyl and methamphetamine into Los Angeles through MacArthur Park.
On Wednesday, federal and local law enforcement officers raided the South Los Angeles park as part of “Operation Free MacArthur Park,” arresting 18 individuals, executing multiple search warrants, and seizing roughly 40 pounds of fentanyl with an estimated value of $8 million to $10 million.
In contrast to the park’s description by the Los Angeles Conservancy as a “vibrant place of music, art, and community,” locals know Macarthur Park as a place filled with brazen drug use and homeless encampments.
First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli shared with Fox News his plan for the area.
“This park has been overtaken by gang members—by drug dealers, drug users. It’s zombieland, and we’re taking it back. So today we’re executing 25 arrest warrants, eight federal search warrants, and we’re hitting the businesses along Alvarado here that are used to stash the drugs.”
Footage shared by Fox News showed federal agents moving in on businesses Wednesday morning.
In a press release, the department said it’s dedicated to ending these cartel-fueled crimes.
“This is a criminal organization operating in our country, and we are not going to stand for it anymore today. So, they have been put on notice. MacArthur Park belongs to the people of Los Angeles again,” said Anthony Chrysanthis, a special agent in charge with the Drug Enforcement Administration.
The same day, while at the Los Angeles mayoral debate, incumbent Mayor Karen Bass was asked by moderators to comment on the raids.
Republican Spencer Pratt, one of Bass’ two opponents in the race for mayor, criticized both Bass and City Councilmember Nithya Raman for the problems in the park.
“Raman and Bass are so bad, MacArthur Park was raided by the Feds YESTERDAY and it’s already occupied again today,” Pratt shared on X.
