Gang making new designer drugs busted
POLICE said yesterday they busted a gang operating in Spain and the Netherlands that made new designer drugs including opioids ravaging countries worldwide and were paid mainly in crypto currencies, an emerging trend.
The drug bust, which saw police seize more than 4.5 million euros (US$5.2 million) in virtual currencies, comes as experts warn that drug dealers are increasingly being paid in crypto currencies like bitcoin, which provide more anonymity.
Spanish police said in a statement they had seized more than 100 types of new psychoactive substances in two laboratories in the southern province of Granada and Valencia in the east.
NPS are synthetic drugs that mimic the effects of the original drug, while avoiding being classified as illegal.
These included synthetic cannabis, amphetamines and opioids, “the latter having caused an extremely serious problem in developed countries like the United States.”
The US has declared the opioid crisis a national public health emergency due to the number of deaths and addictions.
Police said the designer drugs were produced in a laboratory in Amsterdam and the two labs in Spain, and sold in the deep web, a clandestine part of the Internet.
Clients could pay with traditional money units but were encouraged to do so in virtual currencies, mainly bitcoin, they added.
Governments and financial institutions have urged global regulations of virtual currencies, which are not overseen by any central bank but by a community of users.