The Justice Department announced today that federal grand
juries in the Southern District of Mississippi and the District of North Dakota
returned indictments, unsealed yesterday, against two Chinese nationals and
their North American based traffickers and distributors for separate
conspiracies to distribute large quantities of fentanyl and fentanyl analogues
and other opiate substances in the United States. The Chinese nationals
are the first manufacturers and distributors of fentanyl and other opiate
substances to be designated as Consolidated Priority Organization Targets
(CPOTs). CPOT designations are those who have “command and
control” elements of the most prolific international drug trafficking and money
laundering organizations.
On Sept. 7, Xiaobing Yan, 40, of China, was indicted in the
Southern District of Mississippi on two counts of conspiracy to manufacture and
distribute multiple controlled substances, including fentanyl and fentanyl
analogues, and seven counts of manufacturing and distributing the drugs in
specific instances. Yan, a distributor of a multitude of illegal drugs,
used different names and company identities over a period of at least six years
and operated websites selling acetyl fentanyl and other deadly fentanyl
analogues directly to U.S. customers in multiple cities across the
country. Yan also operated at least two chemical plants in China that
were capable of producing ton quantities of fentanyl and fentanyl
analogues. Yan monitored legislation and law enforcement activities in
the United States and China, modifying the chemical structure of the fentanyl
analogues he produced to evade prosecution in the United States. Over the
course of the investigation, federal agents identified more than 100
distributors of synthetic opioids involved with Yan’s manufacturing and
distribution networks. Federal investigations of the distributors are ongoing
in 10 judicial districts, and investigators have traced illegal proceeds of the
distribution network. In addition, law enforcement agents intercepted
packages mailed from Yan’s Internet pharmaceutical companies, seizing multiple
kilograms of suspected acetyl fentanyl, potentially enough for thousands of
lethal doses.
On Sept. 20, Jian Zhang, 38, of China, five Canadian
citizens, two residents of Florida, and a resident of New Jersey were indicted
in the District of North Dakota for conspiracy to distribute fentanyl and
fentanyl analogues in the United States, conspiracy to import the drugs from
Canada and China, a money laundering conspiracy, an international money
laundering conspiracy, and operation of a continuing criminal enterprise.
Zhang ran an organization that manufactured fentanyl in at least four known
labs in China and advertised and sold fentanyl to U.S. customers over the
Internet. Zhang’s organization would send orders of fentanyl or other
illicit drugs, or pill presses, stamps, or dies used to shape fentanyl into
pills, to customers in the United States through the mail or international
parcel delivery services. Federal law enforcement agents determined that
Zhang sent many thousands of these packages since January of 2013.
On Oct. 11, Elizabeth Ton, 26, and Anthony Gomes, 33, both
of Davie, Florida were arrested. On Oct. 12, Darius Ghahary, 48, of Ramsey, New
Jersey was arrested. Ton, Gomes, and Ghahary are charged with drug trafficking
conspiracy in the Zhang indictment.
The investigations of Yan and Zhang revealed a new and
disturbing facet of the opioid crisis in America: fentanyl and fentanyl
analogues are coming into the United States in numerous ways, including highly
pure shipments of fentanyl from factories in China directly to U.S. customers
who purchase it on the Internet. Unwary or inexperienced users often have
no idea that they are ingesting fentanyl until it is too late. The
Centers for Disease Control estimates that over 20,000 Americans were killed by
fentanyl and fentanyl analogues in 2016, and the number is rising at an
exponential rate.
Zhang was charged with conduct resulting in the deaths of
four individuals in North Carolina, New Jersey, North Dakota, and Oregon in
2014 and 2015 and the serious bodily injuries related to five additional
individuals.
These recent law enforcement efforts to
keep fentanyl and fentanyl analogues from entering the United States were
announced by Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein; Acting Administrator
Robert W. Patterson of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Acting Deputy
Director Peter T. Edge of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Assistant Commissioner Joanne
Crampton of the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
“Zhang and Yan are the first Chinese nationals designated as
Consolidated Priority Organization Targets (CPOTs),” said Deputy Attorney
General Rosenstein. “CPOTs are among the most significant drug
trafficking threats in the world. The defendants allegedly shipped massive quantities
of deadly fentanyl and other synthetic opioids to communities throughout the
United States, mostly purchased on the Internet and sent through the mail.
The chemicals allegedly killed and injured people in several states, and
surely caused misery to many thousands of people. Under the leadership of
President Trump and Attorney General Sessions, we are taking back our
communities by pursuing suppliers of deadly drugs wherever they are located.”
“Xiaobing Yan, Jian Zhang and their respective associates represent
one of the most significant drug threats facing the country – overseas
organized crime groups capable of producing nearly any synthetic drug
imaginable, including fentanyl, and who attempt to hide their tracks with
web-based sales, international shipments and cryptocurrency transactions,” said
DEA Acting Administrator Patterson. “At a time when overdose deaths are
at catastrophic levels, one of DEA’s top priorities is the pursuit of criminal
organizations distributing their poison to American neighborhoods. These
indictments are a first step; our investigators remain relentless in their
pursuit to dismantle these organizations and bring those responsible to
justice. DEA, along with our global network of law enforcement partners,
will go after these types of criminals wherever they operate.”
“This case began when local police officers responded to
what has become an all-too familiar tragedy in the United States: the heroin
and fentanyl overdose of two young adults, one who survived and another who did
not,” said ICE Acting Deputy Director Edge. “Fentanyl is 50 times more potent
than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. Drug trafficking
organizations that deal in such a deadly game will have to face the combined
resources of federal law enforcement agencies and our international partners.
ICE Homeland Security Investigations is committed to helping combat this new
and growing epidemic.”
“We live in an increasingly global and interconnected world
– crime has no borders,” said Assistant Commissioner Crampton. “Law enforcement
must respond accordingly by working beyond our borders together to detect
and disrupt criminal activity. By fostering a solid integrated and coordinated
law enforcement approach, we will continue to disrupt international drug
trafficking networks.”
The cases against Yan and Zhang are
being investigated by the DEA,
ICE Homeland Security Investigations, the Internal Revenue Service Criminal
Investigation, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the RCMP. Valuable
investigative assistance has also been provided by U.S. Customs and Border
Protection and the Ministry of Public Security of China. The case against
Yan is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney John Meynardie in the
Southern District of Mississippi. The case against Zhang is being
prosecuted by U.S. Attorney Chris Myers and Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Kerin
in the District of North Dakota, along with Trial Attorney Adrienne Rose of the
Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section. Substantial
prosecutorial assistance has been provided by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the
District of Oregon and the Quebec office of the Public Prosecution Service of
Canada.
Both of the indictments announced today are the result of
coordinated, multi-agency, multi-national investigations conducted by agents
and investigators of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF),
and were further supported with national and international coordination led by
the multi-agency Special Operations Division (SOD). The OCDETF Program is
a partnership between federal, state, local, and international law enforcement
agencies. The OCDETF mission is to target the most serious transnational
organized crime threats facing the United States, including drug trafficking,
weapons trafficking, and money laundering. Prior to the announcement of
these indictments, Jian Zhang and Xiaobing Yan were designated as OCDETF
Consolidated Priority Organization Targets (CPOTs), and are considered by the
United States as some of the most significant drug trafficking threats in the
world.
If convicted, Yan faces a maximum statutory penalty of 20
years in prison, a $1 million fine, and three years of supervised release.
Zhang faces up to life in prison and $12.5 million in fines. Any sentences will
be determined at the discretion of the district courts after considering any
applicable statutory factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. The charges
are only allegations; the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless
proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Twenty-one individuals in total have been indicted on
federal drug charges in both North Dakota and Oregon as part of the
investigation.
No comments:
Post a Comment