NYPD have arrested four people as part of a drug supply
investigation in the wake of the death of the actor Philip Seymour Hoffman.
US news sources including CBS said the arrests were made on
Tuesday night in a building on Mott Street in the New York district known as
NoHo – north of Houston street. All four unnamed suspects were charged with
possession of narcotics.
Police searched three apartments and found 350 bags of
heroin in all, reports said. They arrested three men and a woman who were
questioned over the sale of heroin, CBS cited sources as saying.
An NYPD spokesman confirmed to Reuters that officers found
narcotics and four people were arrested. He declined to confirm that the
arrests were related to Hoffman's death.
Authorities earlier said heroin recovered at the
Oscar-winning actor's apartment had tested negative for the powerful additive
fentanyl.
Samples taken from Hoffman's Manhattan apartment did not
contain the potent synthetic morphine, which is added to intensify the high and
has been linked to suspected overdose deaths, said a police official, who was
not authorised to talk about the evidence and insisted on anonymity.
The Capote star made six ATM transactions for a total of
$1,200 inside a supermarket near his home the day before his death, law
enforcement officials said. The 46-year-old actor was found dead in the
bathroom of his apartment Sunday.
Investigators have been piecing together the final hours
before Hoffman's death, using video surveillance to determine his whereabouts.
Besides the bank records, the law enforcement officials said, investigators had
discovered buprenorphine, a drug used to treat heroin addiction, at Hoffman's
apartment and were examining a computer and two iPads found at the scene for
clues.
Results of an autopsy are expected to be released on
Wednesday. Police have said the medical examiner's ruling will determine
whether there is any criminality but they suspect it was an overdose.
The New York police department's intensive effort to
determine the source of the drugs in an apparent accidental overdose is
unusual. Courts have found in past rulings that under state law drug dealers
can't be held liable for a customer's death.
More than 50 small plastic envelopes of heroin were
recovered in Hoffman's apartment, along with syringes, a charred spoon and
various prescription medications, including a blood pressure drug and a muscle
relaxant, law enforcement officials have said.
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