• U.S. Charges 4 Chinese Firms With Selling Chemicals to Make Fentanyl

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 30 00:00:31 2023
    U.S. Charges 4 Chinese Firms With Selling Chemicals to Make Fentanyl
    By Benjamin Weiser and Karen Zraick, June 23, 2023, NY Times
    Four chemical companies based in China and eight Chinese nationals have been charged with trafficking chemicals used by Mexican drug cartels to manufacture vast quantities of fentanyl later sold in the United States, federal officials said on Friday.

    The officials said that two of the defendants, the principal executive of one Chinese firm and its marketing manager, had been arrested overseas and taken to Hawaii for a court appearance, and that they would be brought to Manhattan to face prosecution.

    The indictments announced Friday in New York are part of a strategy by the Drug Enforcement Administration to attack the scourge of fentanyl at every stage of the supply chain. The buyers of the chemicals were largely organizations like the Sinaloa
    cartel, formerly run by the Mexican drug lord known as El Chapo, which the Justice Dept says is largely responsible for the influx of fentanyl into the United States.

    Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said in a news conference that the firms advertised the so-called precursor chemicals online, and an indictment said they were packaged to resemble dog food, nuts or motor oil. Wuhan-based Hubei Amarvel Biotech Co., Mr.
    Garland added, “went as far as to guarantee ‘100% stealth shipping,’ and they provided proof of their success on their websites, including a screenshot of a shipping confirmation to Culiacán, Mexico, the Sinaloa cartel’s base of operations.”

    Anne Milgram, the administrator of the D.E.A., said the companies also chemically camouflaged their goods in the lab.

    “They even disguised the chemicals at a molecular level, adding a molecule to mask the precursors so they would not be detected as banned substances during transport,” Ms. Milgram said. “They taught their customers how to remove that molecule after
    they received the chemicals.”

    Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said at the news conference that over the course of the investigation, Amarvel Biotech shipped more than 200 kilograms of precursor chemicals to the United States, which for that
    company “was apparently only a drop in the bucket,” Mr. Williams added.

    The two Chinese executives taken into custody, Qingzhou Wang and Yiyi Chen, worked for Amarvel Biotech, Mr. Williams’s office said. A lawyer for Qingzhou Wang did not immediately respond to a request for comment; one for Ms. Chen declined. A third
    employee was also charged and is at large.

    Three other Chinese companies along with five employees were named in indictments unsealed on Friday in Brooklyn federal court.

    Breon S. Peace, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, noted at the news conference that although most of the chemicals the companies sold were legal, the defendants knew they would be used to make fentanyl. “This is akin to a company
    selling the components for a bomb, knowing they would be used to make an explosive,” Mr. Peace said.

    Ms. Milgram called fentanyl “the greatest threat to Americans today,” adding that fentanyl overdoses are the leading cause of death for people between 18 and 45. The drug can be 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine, and
    is sometimes added to cocaine or heroin without the buyer’s knowledge.

    In New York City, overdoses have skyrocketed thanks to fentanyl, with 2,668 deaths in 2021, a 78 percent jump from 2019, according to city data.

    Ms. Milgram said the Chinese firms gave their customers the raw materials and the scientific know-how to make the drug — “and they knew exactly who they were working with.”

    “They provided the chemicals,” she said. “They gave advice on how to mix them. They made changes to the recipe when an ingredient wasn’t available. They told a customer to substitute one ingredient for another to make twice as much fentanyl. They
    employed chemists to troubleshoot when customers had questions.”

    The charges revealed Friday came two months after Mr. Garland announced sweeping indictments in Manhattan, Chicago and Washington, D.C., against more than two dozen people in what he described as a global fentanyl manufacturing and distribution operation
    run by the Sinaloa cartel.

    Those defendants included the four sons of El Chapo, whose real name is Joaquín Guzmán Loera and who is serving life in prison in the United States after his 2019 conviction in Brooklyn.

    The D.E.A. has also pursued dealers across the United States who sell fentanyl on the streets. Last month, the agency announced the completion of Operation Last Mile, a yearlong effort to stop dealers that resulted in more than 3,300 arrests and the
    seizure of nearly 44 million fentanyl pills and more than 6,500 pounds of powder.

    The trade was also a major topic this week during a visit to Beijing by Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken. The United States and China have been at loggerheads over military and technological policies, the Russia-Ukraine war and human rights, but Mr.
    Blinken said that he raised fentanyl control as an area of potential cooperation. Mr. Blinken said that the countries would explore setting up a working group to “shut off the flow” of precursor chemicals.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/23/nyregion/china-fentanyl-companies-charged.html

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