Attorney General Jeff Sessions today announced the unsealing
of a 43-count indictment in federal court in Cleveland, which charges two
Chinese citizens with operating a conspiracy that manufactured and shipped
deadly fentanyl analogues and 250 other drugs to at least 25 countries and 37
states. The indictment also alleges the
drugs sold by the group directly led to the fatal overdoses of two people in
Akron, Ohio.
Fujing Zheng, aka Gordon Jin, 35, and his father Guanghua
Zheng, 62, both of whom reside in Shanghai, China, are charged with conspiracy
to manufacture and distribute controlled substances, conspiracy to import
controlled substances into the United States, operating a continued criminal
enterprise, money laundering and other crimes. The charges carry a potential
sentence of life imprisonment because the drugs involved resulted in death, and
the defendants’ conduct qualifies for an enhancement under the kingpin statute.
The indictment was announced by Attorney General Jeff
Sessions, Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski for the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman for the Northern District
of Ohio, Acting Administrator Uttam Dhillon of the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), Special Agent in Charge Timothy Plancon of DEA’s Detroit
Field Office, Special Agent in Charge Steve Francis of U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) for Michigan and
Ohio and Special Agent in Charge Ryan Korner of IRS Criminal Investigation (CI)
Cincinnati Field Office.
“Fentanyl and its analogues are the number one killer drug
in America today, and most of them come from China,” said Attorney General
Sessions. “That’s why the Department of
Justice under President Donald Trump has taken historic new steps against the
threat of Chinese fentanyl. In October, we announced the first-ever indictments
of Chinese nationals for fentanyl trafficking; 32 defendants have been charged
in those cases. Today we are announcing an indictment of the leaders of the
Zheng drug trafficking organization based in China, who the indictment alleges
sold drugs that have killed at least two Ohioans. I want to thank U.S. Attorney
Herdman and his fabulous Assistant U.S. Attorneys, our Criminal Division, DEA,
FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, and IRS Criminal Investigation special
agents and our Postal Inspectors for all of their hard work on this case. By
cutting off fentanyl and its analogues at the source, we can save American
lives.”
“As detailed in this indictment, the trail from at least two
dead bodies in Akron, Ohio, leads to the Zhengs,” said U.S. Attorney Herdman.
“This group has shipped deadly fentanyl analogues and other drugs around the
globe for a decade. Law enforcement will follow the evidence wherever it leads,
including overseas, to stop the flow of drugs that have caused so much
heartbreak and destruction in Ohio.”
“DEA will relentlessly pursue anyone shipping deadly
fentanyl analogues to the United States wherever they may be and bring them to
justice,” said DEA Acting Administrator Dhillon. “These Chinese drug traffickers are directly
responsible for the deaths of U.S. citizens and we will hold them accountable
in a U.S. court of law.”
“This case clearly shows that our collaborative efforts with
law enforcement at every level continue to have an impact,” said HSI Special
Agent in Charge Francis. “These efforts
exhibit the combined resources of American law enforcement agencies’ resolve to
ending this deadly epidemic.”
“Today’s indictments, which include charges related to the
defendants’ smuggling drug profits in and out of the United States, are a
victory for the American public and a defeat to drug traffickers everywhere,”
said IRS-CI Special Agent in Charge Korner.
“The special agents of IRS Criminal Investigation continue in their
mission to disrupt the flow of ill-gotten gains that are the life-blood for
these criminals.”
According to the indictment:
The Zhengs and others used numerous companies, including
Global United Biotechnology, Golden Chemicals, Golden RC, Cambridge Chemicals,
Wonda Science, and others, to manufacture and distribute hundreds of controlled
substances, including fentanyl analogues such as carfentanil, acetyl fentanyl,
furanyl fentanyl, and others. They created and maintained numerous websites to
advertise and sell illegal drugs in more than 35 languages.
From 2008 to the present, the Zheng drug trafficking
organization (Zheng DTO) engaged in this conspiracy from its base of operations
in Shanghai. The organization claimed to ship “over 16 tonnes of chemicals
every month” from its “own laboratory” and to “synthesize nearly any chemical
on a bespoke basis in any quantity.”
The Zheng DTO touted its ability to create custom-ordered
drugs and avoid detection from customs and law enforcement when shipping the
drugs. The Zheng DTO explained in emails and online that it had “special ways”
to “go through customs safely” in “USA, Russia, Europe,” and other locations
around the world. If customs still
managed to seize the parcels, the DTO promised it would “re-ship free.”
The Zheng DTO used co-conspirators in other countries,
including the United States, to receive, repackage, and redistribute the drug
shipments, thereby hiding their Chinese origin. For example, it used companies
run by Massachusetts-based co-conspirator Bin Wang to smuggle drugs past
customs agents in China and the United States. Wang then shipped the drugs to
customers across the country.
Wang has pleaded guilty to his role in the conspiracy and is
scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 13.
The Zheng DTO has sent millions of lethal doses of fentanyl
analogues and other drugs linked to overdoses in the United States and around
the world.
On Feb. 15, 2015, Akron, Ohio resident, Leroy Steele,
emailed the Zheng DTO saying he “would like to purchase Acetyl fentanyl.” The
Zheng DTO explained in its correspondence with Steele that it was “a
professional acetyl fentanyl manufacturer in China” and that “a lot of U.S. and
Europe customers purchase largely from us monthly.” The acetyl fentanyl that the Zheng DTO
distributed to Steele resulted in the overdose deaths in Ohio of Thomas Rauh,
37, and Carrie Dobbins, 23, on or about March 21 and 28, 2015.
Steele was subsequently convicted of drug offenses and is
currently serving a 20-year prison sentence.
Despite the deadly consequences of its actions, the Zheng
DTO continued manufacturing and distributing drugs. In 2015, it advertised that
it delivered “to all 50 USA states” and “worldwide to Australia, Europe, Asia
and Africa.”
When China would ban a synthetic narcotic, the Zheng DTO
would use its chemical expertise to create an analogue of the drug with a
slightly different chemical structure but the same or even more potent effect.
In this manner, the DTO entirely bypassed China’s restrictions on international
narcotics sales.
Last month, the Zheng DTO agreed to manufacture adulterated
cancer medication, creating counterfeit pills that replaced the active
cancer-fighting ingredient with dangerous synthetic drugs. It also created and
shipped counterfeit Adderall pills that were adulterated with deadly bath
salts.
The Zheng DTO laundered its drug proceeds by using digital
currency such as Bitcoin, transmitted drug proceeds into and out of bank
accounts in China and Hong Kong, and bypassed currency restrictions and
reporting requirements.
If convicted, the defendant’s sentence will be determined by
the Court after review of factors unique to this case, including the
defendant’s prior criminal record, if any, the defendant's role in the offense
and the characteristics of the violation.
In all cases, the sentence will not exceed the statutory maximum and in
most cases it will be less than the maximum.
This investigation was conducted by the DEA, HSI, and
IRS-CI. The following agencies assisted in the investigation: U.S. Postal
Inspection Service, FBI, Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force,
Special Operations Division, the Medway Drug Task Force, Akron Police
Department, federal law enforcement on assignment at the U.S. Embassy in
Beijing and federal law enforcement in the following districts: District of Massachusetts,
Middle District of Florida, District of Colorado, District of Missouri,
District of Minnesota and Western District of Texas. The Criminal Division’s
Office of International Affairs provided assistance. The Chinese Ministry of Public Security provided
assistance during the course of the investigation.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew J. Cronin of the Northern
District of Ohio and Justice Department Criminal Division Trial Attorneys
Adrienne Rose of the Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section and Deputy Unit Chief
Stephen Sola of the Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section, are
prosecuting the case.
An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of
guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair
trial in which it will be the government’s burden to prove guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
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