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News Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September
21, 2005
Contact: DEA Public Affairs
Number: 202-307-7977
DEA
Disables Major Pharmaceutical Internet Scheme
New “Virtual Enforcement Initiative” Announced
SEP
21--(Washington, D.C.)- In Dallas, Texas, today Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) Administrator Karen P. Tandy announced the culmination
of Operation CYBERx, a multi-faceted Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Force (OCDETF) investigation targeting major alleged pharmaceutical
drug traffickers operating solely in the United States.
Recognizing that
criminals are facilitating more drug-related crimes through the use
of 21st century technology, the DEA, along with their law enforcement
counterparts today arrested 18 people for allegedly selling pharmaceutical
drugs illegally over the Internet. Those arrested include the ringleaders
of more than 4,600 rogue Internet pharmacy websites.
This DEA-led investigative
effort is the first to target e-trafficking located solely within the
United States. The alleged drug dealers who operated these rogue internet
pharmacies received prescription orders for controlled substances over
the Internet, which were then shipped to the doors of many U.S. citizens-sometimes
without any prescription needed. These alleged criminal pharmaceutical
drug traffickers averaged more than $50,000 a day in profits from their
illegal Internet based enterprise.
Today’s arrests
included Johar Saran, of Arlington, TX; Gaston Blanchet and Gil Lozano,
of Miami, FL; S. Ted Solomon, of Orlando, FL; and Steve Rosner, of
Boca Raton, FL. These individuals are the alleged ringleaders of this
multi-million dollar drug distribution network.
Operation CYBERx
is part of the DEA’s “Virtual Enforcement Initiative (VEI).” This
new DEA cyber initiative acknowledges that criminals in the drug trade
are embracing the use of 21st century technology to peddle their poisons
into U.S. communities.
DEA Administrator
Karen P. Tandy said, “Operation CYBERx puts out of business alleged
cyber criminals who were selling powerful narcotics without legitimate
prescriptions to anyone with a computer and cash. These high-tech drug
dealers were fueling addictions by selling the very drugs intended
to prevent and treat ailments—not inflict them. Just as important,
this Operation makes more Americans aware that buying prescription
drugs from these rogue websites is illegal and dangerous.”
E-based illegal
pharmacies allow abusers to easily access pharmaceutical drugs from
the comfort of their homes. Without a doctor’s visit, sometimes
without a prescription, without consulting with a pharmacist, any drug
abuser with enough cash could have almost any quantity of prescription
drugs-with door to door delivery. With DEA-led efforts under the VEI,
e-traffickers will find difficulty in luring our nations youth to their
on-line pharmacies for easy access to drugs.
The VEI concept
was realized last April when DEA led Operation “Cyber Chase,” which
resulted in more than 20 arrests in eight U.S. cities and four foreign
countries; shutting down an organization that ran over 200 web sites
illegally selling what were identified as pharmaceutical drugs. This
year-long OCDETF investigation targeted international Internet pharmaceutical
traffickers operating in the United States, India, Asia, Europe and
the Caribbean. These e-traffickers also distributed drugs world-wide
using rogue Internet pharmacies.
In January 2005,
DEA launched a toll-free international hotline (1-877-RX-ABUSE) for
anonymous reporting of the illegal sale and abuse of controlled substances.
In addition to the
18 individuals arrested as part of Operation CYBERx, seven luxury cars,
2,400 checks and money orders from individual customers, and several
boxes of cash were seized.
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