The father of ex-Jets quarterback Michael Vick was among 12 people busted in a massive drug ring in North Carolina, according to an indictment that was unsealed Wednesday.

Michael Boddie, 55, is accused of running a “large-scale heroin distribution operation” between January 2014 and May 2017. Boddie and 11 others allegedly started the operation to move more than 1,000 grams of heroin, the indictment said.

Although seven of the 12 made appearances at U.S. District Court in Virginia, Boddie remains at large. He’s been charged with dealing heroin and money laundering.

Boddie, whose son retired from the NFL this year, told the Washington Post in 2007 he had battled with alcohol and drugs during Vick’s earlier years. The current relationship between Vick and Boddie is unclear, though they have been estranged in the past.

“He’s seen his father drunk, high. I used to [mess] with cocaine,” Boddie said. “He’s seen it all. He’s seen [people] drunk on the ground. He’s seen dope deals being done. He’s seen it all.”

Vick, once the electrifying franchise player for the Atlanta Falcons, infamously was convicted of operating a dogfighting ring in Virginia in 2007. He was sentenced to 21 months behind bars, but returned to the NFL with the Eagles in 2009. He spent five years in Philadelphia before joining the Jets in 2014. He last appeared with the Steelers in 2015, the final action of his 13-season NFL career.

Vick’s younger brother Marcus, also a former NFL quarterback, has a criminal history as well.