Shots fired at Guilford deputies during High Point drug raid, 3 arrested
Shots were fired at Guilford County deputies during a High Point warrant service, but no one was hurt. Investigators seized fentanyl, cocaine and a gun, and three people were arrested.

A High Point drug raid turned dangerous at 1017 Tabor St. when shots were fired at Guilford County deputies serving a narcotics search warrant, but no deputies or civilians were injured.
The Guilford County Sheriff’s Office said members of its Street Crimes Unit and the Guilford County Narcotics Task Force were at the residence on May 13 when Courtenay Marie Hineline, 33, allegedly discharged a firearm at law enforcement. Investigators recovered about 58 grams of fentanyl, 3 grams of cocaine and one firearm at the scene.
Hineline was charged with two counts of felony trafficking fentanyl, felony possession with intent to sell or deliver fentanyl, felony maintaining a dwelling for the purpose of keeping or selling a controlled substance, and eight counts of felony assault on a law enforcement officer with a firearm. Two others at the home, Cameron Russell Miller, 39, and James Michael Frazier Jr., 53, were also arrested and each charged with two counts of felony trafficking fentanyl, felony possession with intent to sell or deliver fentanyl, and felony maintaining a dwelling for the purpose of keeping or selling a controlled substance.
Miller and Frazier each received a $500,000 secured bond and were being held at the Guilford County Detention Center in High Point. Their next court appearance is set for June 19, 2026, at 9 a.m.

Hineline was initially given a $1 million secured bond, but she was taken to a local hospital for treatment of an unrelated medical emergency before the intake process was completed. Authorities said she will be taken to the detention center after she is released.
The operation drew on the Guilford County Narcotics Task Force, which includes the Guilford County Sheriff’s Office, Greensboro Police Department, North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration. The sheriff’s office Special Operations Division says it provides support personnel to the DEA Drug Task Force and other specialized units, a reminder that cases like this are part of a broader county effort to confront drug trafficking and the violence that can come with it.
The amount of fentanyl seized is especially significant. The DEA says just 2 milligrams can be a lethal dose, underscoring how a few grams can translate into a wide public-safety threat in Guilford County and beyond.
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