California donut shop owner accused of making, selling ‘pink cocaine’

Luis Carrillo-Moyeda, 32, allegedly peddled synthetic drug mixture in San Jose, California

A California man has been arrested after authorities said he was making and peddling a new synthetic drug known as "pink cocaine."

Luis Carrillo-Moyeda, 32, was identified as a primary suspect after detectives uncovered evidence of the manufacturing and sale of illegal narcotics out of a business located in the 400 block of Blossom Hill Road in San Jose, the San Jose Police Department said Wednesday.

Carillo-Moyeda owns the Yum Yum Donut shop in a shopping center on Blossom Hill Road, according to records obtained by FOX2 KTVU.

Detectives executed search warrants for the suspect’s home and place of business on Jan. 19 and recovered various illegal narcotics, narcotics manufacturing parts, large amounts of cash, an unregistered firearm and ammunition, police said.

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Luis Carrillo-Moyeda, 32, is accused of manufacturing and selling a new synthetic drug known as "pink cocaine." (San Jose Police Department)

Carrillo-Moyeda was allegedly manufacturing and peddling a substance known as "Tusi," "2C," "Pink Cocaine," "Pantera Rosa" or "Pink Panther."

The "pink cocaine" narcotic is known by multiple other names, including "Tusi," "2C," "Pantera Rosa" and "Pink Panther." It is a mixture of ketamine, MDMA, methamphetamine, cocaine, and opioids, police said. (San Jose Police Department)

The illegal narcotics are a new synthetic drug made from a mixture of ketamine, methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), methamphetamine, cocaine, and opioids, police said. The substance appears pink.

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Dr. Daniel Nelson, of Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, told the local station that the mixture of drugs can be deadly, with possible symptoms including agitation, hallucinations, psychosis and hyperstimulation.

Detectives also recovered narcotics manufacturing parts, large amounts of cash, an unregistered firearm and ammunition. (San Jose Police Department)

San Jose Police spokeswoman Tanya Hernandez warned that this type of narcotic has recently caught the attention of law enforcement.

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"We are starting to see it, more cases of it. So, we just wanted the public to be aware that it is out there," she told the station. 

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