Two Quebec inmates
took part in massive
fentanyl distribution ring
linked directly to China:
U.S. prosecutors
On Tuesday, federal prosecutors in the U.S. announced
that charges had been laid against several people —
including five Canadians — in the still-unravelling case
[What is Canada waiting for, what is the matter with the Canadian Government, why cant they
name the country that this drug is coming from, why are they dithering
when so many lives have been killed! Canada appears cowardly in this whole mess.
Call out China,the source for all these deaths immediately or
stand down as a government and let another take charge.]
CWC.
It could easily have been overlooked as another sad-but-inevitable outcome of the fentanyl scourge sweeping North America.
But the overdose death of an 18-year-old in North Dakota in early 2015 sparked a global investigation that has uncovered a massive illicit drug-distribution network spanning the U.S., Canada and China.
On Tuesday, federal prosecutors in the U.S. announced that charges had been laid against several people — including five Canadians — in the still-unravelling case. Indictments allege the buying and selling of synthetic drugs took place over the dark web using virtual currencies and a slew of aliases, such as “Phantom Pharma” and “Toxic Storm.”
According to court documents, two individuals — a Canadian and a Colombian national — helped orchestrate the movement of drugs while they were serving time in Quebec’s Drummond Institution, a medium-security prison.
“Synthetic drugs, in particular fentanyl, are a major threat to both our countries,” Joanne Crampton, assistant commissioner with the RCMP, which assisted in the investigation, said at a press conference in Washington, D.C.
“Fentanyl trafficking is a worldwide problem — it knows no borders. We must intercept drugs before they reach our communities.”
The investigation began in January 2015 following the death of Bailey Henke, 18, in Grand Forks, N.D. He had overdosed on powdered fentanyl while playing video games with his buddies.
Local authorities learned that the drugs had been purchased online from a seller in Portland, Ore. The seller, in turn, told investigators he had acquired the drugs from Canada.
18-year-old Bailey Henke in 2015 sparked
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