Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Two Quebec inmates took part in massive fentanyl distribution ring linked directly to China: U.S. prosecutors

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


Image result for Feds Indict Chinese Nationals for Fentanyl Sales



[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.
The fentanyl overdose death of 
18-year-old Bailey Henke in 2015 sparked
a global investigation.Facebook

His point of contact, according to court documents, was Daniel Vivas Ceron, a Colombian national who, at the time, was serving a sentence in Quebec for attempted murder. He said he communicated with Vivas Ceron via email and WICKR, an app that encrypts messages and deletes them after a certain period of time.
An undercover U.S. Homeland Security investigator began to communicate with Vivas Ceron, negotiating multiple purchases of fentanyl using bank wires and Bitcoin virtual currency. The drugs were shipped to the undercover agent from Canada and China.
In June 2015, officials searched Vivas Ceron’s prison cell and recovered a phone, SIM cards and documents containing notes of his correspondence with the undercover agent, according to court records.
The following month, as Vivas Ceron was in the process of being deported to his native Colombia from Canada, he was rearrested in Panama City under a U.S. warrant. Vivas Ceron, 36, was extradited to North Dakota earlier this year and is awaiting trial.
Meanwhile, investigators set their sights on other people in the network. On Tuesday, federal prosecutors in North Dakota and Mississippi announced that grand juries had returned indictments against two Chinese nationals accused of being involved in the manufacture of fentanyl and fentanyl analogues, and five Canadians and three American residents accused of being involved in trafficking and distribution.
Daniel Vivas Ceron, a Colombian national who was serving a sentence in Quebec for attempted murder. 
One of the Canadians, Jason Joey Berry, 34, of Quebec, was incarcerated at Drummond Institution in Quebec at the same time as Vivas Ceron and is identified in court documents as having a leadership role. The other four Canadians, all from Quebec, were identified as: Xuan Cahn Nguyen, 38; Marie Um, 37; Vannek Um, 39; and Linda Van, 25.
The two Chinese nationals are Xiaobing Yan, 40, and Jian Zhang, 38.
Zhang, according to court documents, operated under the business name “Zaron Bio-tech” and played a leadership role.
Yan, meanwhile, operated websites using different names and company identities and also operated at least two chemical plants in China capable of producing fentanyl and fentanyl analogues, it was alleged. Federal prosecutors said he monitored legislation and law enforcement activities in the U.S. and China, “modifying the chemical structure of the fentanyl analogues he produced to evade prosecution.”
“(Zhang and Yan) 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 Robert Patterson, acting administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
U.S. authorities use a graphic to illustrate an international fentanyl network at a Department of Justice press conference announcing indictments in the case, Oct. 17, 2017. Sul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
According to the indictments, the co-conspirators “used computers to order and sell substances online using internet sites that are specifically designed to be hidden from the public.”
Prosecutors allege these drugs were shipped from Canada and China and then distributed across the United States, resulting in the deaths of Henke in North Dakota, and at least three other deaths in North Carolina, New Jersey and Oregon.
The allegations have not been proven in court.
At least 10 other individuals in North Dakota and Oregon have already pleaded guilty in connection with the investigation.
One of them, Brandon Corde Hubbard, the person in Portland who sold the drugs that led to the death of Henke, reportedly told a court last year: “I hurt a lot of people. Being a drug dealer is not something I aspired to. I know what I did was wrong. I’m truly sorry.”





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