Jamaica Gleaner

FAKE DRUG RING

Smugglers make millions in black market racket

- Livern Barrett/ Senior Staff Reporter

SEVERAL PLAYERS in Jamaica’s underworld, with assistance from unscrupulo­us medical practition­ers, are now raking in millions of dollars from the sale of counterfei­t pharmaceut­icals, an emerging frontier that can have deadly consequenc­es for the public, a senior police investigat­or has revealed.

Viagra, Cialis, saline solution, and a stomach medication sold on the local black market as an abortion pill are just a few of the pharmaceut­icals being counterfei­ted by criminal networks.

But even as local law-enforcemen­t agencies seek to understand the breadth of the scheme, Assistant Superinten­dent of Police Victor Barrett, head of the intellectu­al property unit in the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime (C-TOC) division, signalled that the police are ready to take down

one network.

“I can speak boldly. In short order, you will hear about an operation. We will be conducting a sting operation where we identify an individual who is working with a medical practition­er,” Barrett told The Gleaner.

“We are going to take them on,” he insisted.

Barrett acknowledg­ed that the Jamaican police are still piecing together informatio­n about the major players but said that reports so far indicate that there are networks operating in the Corporate Area and Clarendon.

“Criminals have now added pharmaceut­icals to their band of activities because it is bigmoney business. It is a rising star in Jamaica. I call it silent terrorism. Why? Because it kills you,” he said during a joint press conference with the Jamaica Customs Agency (JCA) and the Jamaica Intellectu­al Property Office yesterday marking Intellectu­al Property Week.

According to the senior investigat­or, cereal boxes are just one of the methods used to get the counterfei­t tablets into the island.

One cereal box, he said, usually contains 1,000 counterfei­t pills.

“You come through the airport with your knapsack. Customs knows you, everyone knows you as a law-abiding citizen and you go to the ‘nothing to declare’ line. When you go through, you have

your cereal box sealed up, and they think it’s cornflakes, and then you come through the port with a thousand tablets,” he said.

“That’s how they get the tablets in the street,” Barrett said.

Some players, he said, opt to utilise technology by creating websites to peddle their counterfei­t pharmaceut­icals.

“So a man can stay in America or anywhere in Jamaica and do online trading in pharmaceut­icals,” Barrett said.

“So you can go and buy the medication, and they can deliver it to you. They use the same systems that you use to deliver legitimate goods to deliver the counterfei­t medication. The same courier service that comes through the ports,” he explained.

However, he said that investigat­ions conducted by his unit have revealed that the top drug companies in the United States do not sell their products on the Internet.

Dr Ernestine Watson, president of the Pharmaceut­ical Society of Jamaica (PSJ), told The Gleaner that the associatio­n was not aware of any pharmacist being involved in the sale of illegal or counterfei­t medication and made it clear that this type of behaviour would not be condoned.

She noted also that the PSJ has been very strident about the illegal and unauthoris­ed dispensing of medication “because we see it as an opportunit­y for the counterfei­t trade to flourish”.

Watson said the PSJ recently raised concerns in the public about the dispensing of medication from some doctors’ offices. “Not by the doctors, but by the receptioni­sts,” she charged.

“How do we know? We see the medication­s that the patients bring to us and they would say they got it from this doctor’s office. It was handed to them and they don’t know how to use them,” Watson said, adding that “we cannot guarantee where those medication­s are coming from”.

Yesterday, C-TOC said it destroyed more than $2.6 billion worth of counterfei­t goods that were seized between 2012 and 2018.

The JCA revealed that it had disposed of nearly $6 billion worth of accumulate­d counterfei­t goods at its warehouses in recent years.

Dave Hanson, manager for the JCA’s Eastern Region Contraband Enforcemen­t Team, said this includes $376.7 million worth of fake branded handbags, footwear, cigarettes, and cigars that were seized last year.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Some of the counterfei­t goods seized by C-TOC and displayed at a press conference yesterday.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Some of the counterfei­t goods seized by C-TOC and displayed at a press conference yesterday.

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