Five suspects have been arrested and a large amount of narcotics and guns were seized during a massive drug trafficking bust in Palm Beach County, authorities said.

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier and law enforcement officials on Tuesday announced the results of the six-month investigation, dubbed “Operation Slow N Go.”

According to Uthmeier, investigators uncovered the large-scale trafficking of cocaine, fentanyl, xylazine, psilocybin, marijuana, methamphetamine, testosterone, alprazolam, and pharmaceutical pills.

The widespread drug trafficking ring operated throughout Palm Beach, Miami-Dade, Broward, Okeechobee, Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties in Florida, as well as Suffolk County, Virginia, authorities said.

Two of the suspects were even selling drugs out of a local flea market in Palm Beach using the venue as a front, Uthmeier said.

“If anyone traffics dangerous drugs like fentanyl into Florida, expect our Office of Statewide Prosecution to throw the book at you,” Uthmeier said in a statement. “This case is further proof that Florida has the best sheriffs in the nation, and thanks to their partnership, we have fewer criminals on the street and less fentanyl in our communities.”

In addition to the five arrests, authorities seized six handguns, several automatic rifles, 2,262 grams of narcotics, and 500 pharmaceutical pills.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office worked with the DEA, Florida Department of Law Enforcement and other agencies in the operation.

“Those who choose to profit from addiction should know they cannot hide in our community,” said Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw. “We will aggressively pursue anyone trafficking fentanyl and other deadly substances. We remain committed to protecting our residents and holding drug traffickers accountable.”

The five suspects – Gary Devon West, Darryl “Unc” Butler, Andres Chaves, James Thiele, and Robert Townsend – face numerous charges related to drug trafficking.

Uthmeier said there are two with outstanding warrants and more arrests to come.