Trio allegedly operating dark web drug storefront arrested in 'largest pill seizure in New Jersey's history'
Three New Jersey men have been arrested and charged with running a counterfeit drug storefront on the dark web that sold hundreds of thousands of narcotic pills nationwide in exchange for cryptocurrency, according to Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance’s office.
The investigation targeted an operation advertising itself as “Sinmed” on the dark web, or darknet -- an encrypted portion of the internet that is only accessible using anonymity-providing cyber tools like the Tor Browser.
Investigators seized nearly a half-million pills, the largest ever seizure of pills in the state of New Jersey, according to Vance’s office.
“Not only is this the first time state prosecutors in New York have taken down a dark web storefront, this takedown represents the largest pill seizure in New Jersey’s history,” Vance said in a press release on Tuesday. “If you are engaging in illicit activity on the dark web, you are on notice: we know how to find you, we know how to put you out of business, and we know how to hold you criminally accountable.”
Vance’s office was tipped in 2017 to noticeably large ATM withdrawals in Manhattan and across the river in New Jersey and began tracking a trio of men allegedly involved in the scheme.
“When our office received reports of suspicious activity at ATMs in New York and New Jersey, our talented investigators followed the money, using our state-of-the-art Cyber Lab to uncover a dark web counterfeit pill seller whose $2.3 million operation spanned the U.S.”
The alleged drug ring -- which was run in part out of a cell phone repair shop in Asbury Park, New Jersey according to officials -- sold illicit and counterfeit drugs including counterfeit Xanax, ketamine, GHB and steroids, as well as fentanyl-laced heroin and methamphetamine, according to authorities.
In addition to the recovered drugs, authorities also seized drug ingredients, pill presses and other drug-manufacturing equipment.
If you are engaging in illicit activity on the dark web, you are on notice: we know how to find you, we know how to put you out of business, and we know how to hold you criminally accountable.
Undercover investigators for the Manhattan D.A.'s office purchased about 10,000 alprazolam tablets, in addition to ketamine and GHB, from the darknet storefront, according to officials.
Additionally, the Manhattan D.A.’s Cybercrime and Identity Theft Bureau "identified more than 1,000 packages that were shipped by the defendants from New Jersey to locations across the country, and seized an additional 8,000 tablets by intercepting several of the packages," officials said in the press release.
Nearly all of the packages had return addresses that falsely identified the sender as a Manhattan business, officials said.
Chester Anderson, 44, Jarrette Codd, 41, and Ronald McCarty, 51 – all of New Jersey – were arrested on multiple conspiracy and money laundering charges, officials said. Anderson was additionally charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance and identity theft.