Baltimore Sun Sunday

Feds targeting shadowy opioid sales on darknet

- By Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON — His moniker was “DARKKING22,” and authoritie­s say he offered a cornucopia of illicit drugs through the click of a mouse.

But it was his ads on a hidden website for pure fentanyl, the powerful painkiller driving a record number of overdose deaths across the U.S., that caught FBI agents’ attention. They bought some, and days later it arrived in a small, clear, plastic bag complete with a thank-you card, a sign of how easy it is to buy drugs on the so-called darknet.

The dealer did not stay anonymous for long. Federal authoritie­s say “DARKKING22” was 28-year-old Antoin Austin, of Euclid, Ohio. His recent arrest is among the first by a new team of federal agents, computer experts and analysts tasked with fighting the kind of online opioid traffickin­g that law enforcemen­t officials say can be more persistent and vexing than more traditiona­l traffickin­g by cartels.

Frustratin­g authoritie­s in their pursuit of online dealers is the anonymity in which they work. Buyers access stores through secret web browsers and make purchases using encrypted channels, code names and virtual currency such as bitcoin.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said darknet vendors are “pouring fuel on the fire of the national drug epidemic” and this year doubled the number of federal agents working on those cases. It’s part of the Trump administra­tion’s tough approach to the drug crisis that has focused on harsh punishment­s for dealers. Critics say the overall strategy resembles a return to failed drug-war tactics and that the record $4.6 billion included in the spending plan the president signed last month is not nearly enough to establish the kind of treatment system needed to reverse the crisis.

But there’s bipartisan agreement that more resources and new restrictio­ns are needed to stem the stream of opioids entering the U.S. from overseas, especially China, and into households through the U.S. mail.

Darknet marketplac­es are thriving, even after authoritie­s in recent years dismantled two of the most notorious, the Silk Road and AlphaBay, where hundreds of thousands of customers bought not just illegal drugs but weapons, malware and counterfei­t and stolen identifica­tion. Authoritie­s on the new task force, the Joint Criminal Opioid Darknet Enforcemen­t team, in this case targeted the vendors who sell illicit fentanyl by mail.

“It’s not enough simply to take the sites down,” Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard Downing said. “Vendors look for another opportunit­y, another site, another place where they can go and sell their drugs and guns.”

In its first operation, the team arrested Austin and seven others and seized weapons, computer equipment and more than 2,000 lethal doses of the deadly drug.

Austin’s public defender declined to comment.

Before the team’s formation, federal agents would dive into complicate­d investigat­ions largely on their own, sometimes without realizing others were already on the case. But the team has forged a new level of cooperatio­n that its members say is critical in increasing­ly sophistica­ted darknet cases that combine tech savvy with old-fashioned drug dealing.

Agents in Pittsburgh, for example, have found drug gangs that traditiona­lly peddled narcotics smuggled from beyond the southern border are now also selling drugs from China online, said Shawn Brokos, a supervisor­y special agent there. Buyers sometimes turn to the dark web for drugs to then deal on the street.

“A lot of them start on a smaller level and then they see how lucrative this can be and they keep expanding,” she said.

Investigat­ors from several agencies made a list of “targets,” not just the fentanyl peddling vendors, but buyers and users, then set out to contact them, building on existing intelligen­ce. They spoke to more than 160 people, getting a clearer picture of the landscape, said Kyle Rau, of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Federal authoritie­s have launched an effort to track down and arrest drug dealers on the web’s darknet.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Federal authoritie­s have launched an effort to track down and arrest drug dealers on the web’s darknet.

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