Current:Home > StocksCriminals set up fake online pharmacies to sell deadly counterfeit pills, prosecutors say-LoTradeCoin
Criminals set up fake online pharmacies to sell deadly counterfeit pills, prosecutors say
View Date:2025-01-11 14:42:30
A network of illegal drug sellers based in the U.S., the Dominican Republic and India packaged potentially deadly synthetic opioids into pills disguised as common prescription drugs and sold millions of them through fake online drugstores, federal prosecutors said Monday.
At least nine people died of narcotics poisoning between August 2023 and June 2024 after consuming the counterfeit pills, according to an indictment unsealed in federal court in Manhattan.
The indictment charges that the leader of the enterprise, Francisco Alberto Lopez Reyes, orchestrated the scheme from the Dominican Republic, directing co-conspirators to set up dozens of online pharmacies that mimicked legitimate e-commerce sites. The sites lured customers into buying synthetic opioids — in some cases methamphetamine — disguised as prescription drugs such as Adderall, Xanax and oxycodone.
The counterfeit pills were sold to tens of thousands of Americans in all 50 states and to customers in Puerto Rico, Germany and Slovenia, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said at a news conference announcing the indictment.
”The websites the defendants made and the pills they distributed looked very real,” he said. “But they were not.”
Williams said 18 people including Lopez Reyes have been charged with crimes including participating in a narcotics trafficking conspiracy resulting in death. It was not clear whether Lopez Reyes had a lawyer who could comment. No attorney was listed in online court records.
Authorities said the fake pills were manufactured in New York using fentanyl smuggled from Mexico.
Members of the enterprise ran basement pill mills in the Bronx and Manhattan, where they used custom molds to press powdered narcotics into pills at rates of up to 100,000 pills every 12 hours, prosecutors said.
Law enforcement officers raided one pill mill in Manhattan on May 31, 2023, and seized more than 200,000 pills as well as bricks, bags and buckets filled with powdered narcotics, according to the indictment.
Prosecutors said that after the orders were delivered, the conspirators bombarded customers with calls and texts urging them to buy more drugs. One customer had to block 30 phone numbers to stop the aggressive marketing.
One victim, a 45-year-old Army National Guard veteran identified as Holly Holderbaum, purchased what she thought were oxycodone pills in February 2024, according to the indictment.
Holderbaum received the pills in the mail on Feb. 20 and died five days later with 46 of the counterfeit pills by her bedside, prosecutors said.
The pills were made of fentanyl and para-fluorofentanyl, an analog of fentanyl, and Holderman’s cause of death was acute fentanyl intoxication, prosecutors said.
Recent years have seen a surge in fentanyl deaths, including among children, across the U.S. The most recent figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that more than 78,000 people died from overdoses involving synthetic opioids between June 2022 and June 2023, accounting for 92% of all opioid overdose deaths during that period.
Anne Milgram, the administrator of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, who joined Williams at Monday’s news conference, called fentanyl “the most addictive and deadly drug threat that we have ever faced as a nation.”
“Fentanyl is cheap,” Milgram said. “It is easy to make, and even tiny amounts can be highly addictive and deadly.”
veryGood! (1177)
Related
- Caitlin Clark shanks tee shot, nearly hits fans at LPGA's The Annika pro-am
- Lawyer for ex-NYPD commissioner Bernard Kerik says special counsel may not have reviewed records before indicting Trump
- Police shoot and kill a man in Boise, Idaho who they say called for help, then charged at officers
- After federal judge says Black man looks like a criminal to me, appeals court tosses man's conviction
- Glen Powell Addresses Rumor He’ll Replace Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible Franchise
- North Dakota lawmakers eye Minnesota free tuition program that threatens enrollment
- House panel releases interview transcript of Devon Archer, Hunter Biden's former business partner, testifying on Joe Biden calls
- Why has hiring stayed strong? States, cities are finally boosting pay and adding workers
- Patrick Mahomes Breaks Silence on Frustrating Robbery Amid Ongoing Investigation
- Flash flooding emergencies prompt evacuations in Kentucky, Tennessee
Ranking
- See Leonardo DiCaprio's Transformation From '90s Heartthrob to Esteemed Oscar Winner
- Tension intensifies between College Board and Florida with clash over AP psychology course
- In Niger, US seeks to hang on to its last, best counterterrorist outpost in West Africa
- Texas Border Patrol agents find seven spider monkeys hidden in a backpack
- Arbitrator upholds 5-year bans of Bad Bunny baseball agency leaders, cuts agent penalty to 3 years
- Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, expelled Tennessee House members, win back seats
- A baby was found in the rubble of a US raid in Afghanistan. But who exactly was killed and why?
- Bark beetles are eating through Germany’s Harz forest. Climate change is making matters worse
Recommendation
-
Dramatic video shows Phoenix police rescue, pull man from car submerged in pool: Watch
-
Congressional delegation to tour blood-stained halls where Parkland school massacre happened
-
On 3rd anniversary, Beirut port blast probe blocked by intrigue and even the death toll is disputed
-
Babies born in fall and winter should get RSV shots, CDC recommends
-
Lululemon, Disney partner for 34-piece collection and campaign: 'A dream collaboration'
-
Major cases await as liberals exert control of Wisconsin Supreme Court
-
Browns rally past Jets in Hall of Fame Game after lights briefly go out
-
'Mutant Mayhem' reboots the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and does it well