Houston Chronicle Sunday

Opioid trade rises on the dark web

- By Nathaniel Popper

As the nation’s opioid crisis worsens, authoritie­s are confrontin­g a resurgent, unruly player in the illicit trade of the deadly drugs, one that threatens to be even more formidable than the cartels. The internet. In a growing number of arrests and overdoses, law enforcemen­t officials say, the drugs are being bought online. Internet sales have allowed powerful synthetic opioids such as fentanyl — the fastest-growing cause of overdoses nationwide — to reach living rooms in nearly every region of the country, as they arrive in small packages in the mail.

Authoritie­s have been frustrated in their efforts to crack down on the trade because these sites generally exist on the dark web, where buyers can visit anonymousl­y using special browsers and make purchases with virtual currencies like bitcoin.

The problem of dark web sales appeared to have been stamped out in 2013, when authoritie­s took down the most famous online marketplac­e for drugs, known as Silk Road. But since then, countless successors have popped up, making the drugs readily available to tens of thousands of customers who would not otherwise have had access to them.

Among the dead are two 13-year-olds, Grant Seaver and Ryan Ainsworth, who died last fall in the wealthy resort town of Park City, Utah, after taking a synthetic opioid known as U-47700 or Pinky. The boys had received the powder from another local teenager, who bought the drugs on the dark web using bitcoin, according to the Park City police chief.

“It’s unimaginab­le that Grant could gain access to a drug like Pinky so easily, and be gone so quickly, poof,” said Jim Seaver, Grant’s father. “The pain and brutality of this tragedy is crippling.”

Largely because of their potency, synthetic opioids have become the fastestgro­wing cause of the overdose epidemic, overtaking heroin in some areas. Just a few flakes of fentanyl can be fatal.

Their deadly efficiency also makes them ideal for sale online. Unlike heroin and prescripti­on painkiller­s, which are relatively bulky, enough fentanyl to get nearly 50,000 people high can fit in a standard first-class envelope.

Darknet drug markets first gained attention six years ago with the rise of Silk Road, the online market created by Ross Ulbricht. Ulbricht was arrested and the site taken down in late 2013, but imitators quickly proliferat­ed.

No federal agencies have released data on the prevalence of drugs ordered online. But the leading sites are doing far more business than the original Silk Road, according to findings by RAND Europe and researcher­s at Carnegie Mellon University.

Authoritie­s say these markets account for a small proportion of the overall traffic in most drugs, including heroin and cocaine. But when it comes to synthetic opioids, many authoritie­s tracking the traffic say that dark web markets have quickly assumed a more prominent and frightenin­g role.

The dark web “has become such an important source of distributi­on for this sort of deadly drug,” said Kathryn Haun, who was a prosecutor in San Francisco until last month, and the Justice Department’s first digital currency coordinato­r. “It has enabled distributi­on channels that previously didn’t exist.”

As of Friday, the leading darknet market, AlphaBay, had more than 21,000 listings for opioids and more than 4,100 for fentanyl and similar drugs, from dozens of dealers large and small.

Court documents show that in the last year, there have been more than two dozen arrests of American drug dealers who were running significan­t operations buying or selling synthetic opioids online, most of which were tied to specific overdose deaths.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States