Waterloo Region Record

Police say prisoners in Canada among leaders in massive opioid ring

- Colin Perkel

Two men imprisoned in Canada are accused of playing a leadership role from behind bars in what American authoritie­s are calling one of the world’s most prolific fentanyl-traffickin­g and money-laundering operations.

The charges in the case, which come as North America grapples with an increasing­ly deadly opioid crisis, are said to the first in the United States against designated Chinese manufactur­ers of fentanyl and other opiates.

The U.S. Justice Department says customers bought pure fentanyl and other dangerous drugs online directly from Chinese factories, and inexperien­ced users would overdose because they didn’t realize the potency of the opioids.

According to the indictment­s, Jason Berry and Daniel Ceron ran the Canadian end of the alleged criminal enterprise while imprisoned in the Drummond Institutio­n in Drummondvi­lle, Que.

Further details about them were not immediatel­y available, but they are accused of arranging shipments of fentanyl and other drugs from Canada to Florida and Portland Ore., in 2014, according to documents filed with an American court.

The duo are among five Canadians facing charges, U.S. authoritie­s said. In all, more than a dozen accused from around the world were involved in the manufactur­e and distributi­on of tonnes of fentanyl and other powerful narcotics sold in the United States, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announced Tuesday. Two Chinese nationals, Xiaobang Yan, 40, and Jian Zhang, 38, were indicted as overall leaders of the group that operated from January 2013 through August 2016.

“The investigat­ions of Yan and Zhang revealed a new and disturbing facet of the opioid crisis in America: Fentanyl and fentanyl analogues are coming into the United States in numerous ways, including highly pure shipments of fentanyl from factories in China directly to U.S. customers who purchase it on the internet,” the U.S. Justice Dept. said in a statement.

“Unwary or inexperien­ced users often have no idea that they are ingesting fentanyl until it is too late.”

Fentanyl and related opiates are blamed for 20,000 deaths in the U.S. last year and nearly 3,000 more in Canada. Several deaths and serious illness have been tied directly to the alleged ring, U.S. authoritie­s said.

Federal agents were able to identify more than 100 distributo­rs of synthetic opioids involved with Yan’s networks, they said.

“Xiaobing Yan, Jian Zhang 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. officials said Yan kept tabs on legislatio­n and law-enforcemen­t activities in the United States and China, and modified the chemical structures of the fentanyl analogues he made to evade prosecutio­n in the United States.

Assistant Commission­er Joanne Crampton with the RCMP, one of several agencies involved in the investigat­ion, said the force has implemente­d a national strategy aimed at tackling fentanyl importers, distributo­rs and trafficker­s.

“Synthetic drugs, in particular fentanyl, are a major threat to both our countries,” Crampton said in Washington.

Court documents from the District Court eastern division in North Dakota allege the accused used American, Canadian and virtual currency for their transactio­ns in which they ordered and sold the drugs online via secretive websites.

“To hide their financial transactio­ns, co-conspirato­rs used offshore accounts, anonymous virtual currency transactio­ns, and third parties to move money, as well as using encrypted communicat­ion applicatio­ns to discuss financial transactio­ns,” the indictment states.

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 ?? ANDREW HARNIK, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion Acting Administra­tor Robert Patterson, centre, accompanie­d by Royal Canadian Mounted Police Assistant Commission­er Joanne Grace Crampton, left, announces indictment­s in Washington on Tuesday.
ANDREW HARNIK, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion Acting Administra­tor Robert Patterson, centre, accompanie­d by Royal Canadian Mounted Police Assistant Commission­er Joanne Grace Crampton, left, announces indictment­s in Washington on Tuesday.

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