The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fast track to riches; harm in their wake

Supplement industry flies under the radar, poses deadly risks.

- DESIGNER STEROIDS By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com

Beny Mesika and Wes Houser had little in their background­s besides criminal conviction­s and failed businesses, but their fortunes turned when they began concocting dietary supplement­s.

Within five years, they were awash in cash as they blended and bottled products promising a shortcut to size, strength and muscle from their warehouses in the northern Atlanta suburbs.

It was a fast and improbable ride to a life of $300,000 sports cars, ornate mansions, even a 43-acre farm.

Now it’s a cautionary tale showing how easily unscrupulo­us operators can find a home in the supplement industry and the irreparabl­e harm that can result.

Mesika and Houser are key figures in a criminal case currently playing out in Atlanta federal court that is painting one of the most damning pictures to date of the largely unregulate­d industry. Prosecutor­s assert that the pair made millions manufactur­ing supplement­s that in fact were illegal anabolic steroids and that one of those products was potent enough to kill.

The case is one of several in recent years in which the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has sought to crack down on supplement­s containing so-called designer or synthetic steroids.

But the case against Mesika and Houser — a rare instance of prosecutor­s specifical­ly referring to a product causing death or injury — has opened a particular­ly revealing window into just how far behind the curve the government can be in catching up to dangerous supplement­s.

“When you have a market driven by sales instead of safety and efficacy, it’s kind of inevitable that this (kind of harm) would result,” said Dr. David Seres, an associate professor of medicine and nutrition specialist at Columbia University. “Snake oil is pushed to the limit.”

In a plea deal struck with the government on April 19, Houser acknowledg­ed that he and Mesika obtained synthetic steroid compounds from China and Hong Kong and used them to manufactur­e body-building supplement­s for at least 18 months.

The plea acknowledg­es that two of those supplement­s contained Methastero­ne, a particular­ly potent designer steroid that has been classified as a controlled substance, as well as a “slightly adjusted” similar compound. Neither of the supplement­s — one called Mutant Plexx, the other Mass Destructio­n — listed the illegal substances on their labels. Moreover, the government contends, Mass Destructio­n “resulted in serious bodily injury and death.”

Prosecutor­s have not specified who was harmed or how. But court records and other documents reviewed by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on identified at least one injured consumer, a 28-year-old North Carolina man who suffered acute liver failure and needed a transplant two months after using Mass Destructio­n in October 2013.

Marcus Joyner, a shift worker at a manufactur­ing plant in Wilson, N.C., is now suing Mesika, Houser and others, contending they are responsibl­e for his condition and the “significan­t” medical issues he still faces.

Houser, who pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiracy and is due to be sentenced in July, declined to discuss the case when contacted by the AJC.

In exchange for the guilty plea, the government dismissed charges of distributi­ng controlled substances, introducin­g misbranded drugs into interstate commerce and money laundering.

The plea requires Houser, the 40-year-old son of an Atlanta physician, to cooperate with the government, forfeit property obtained as a result of the conspiracy and make restitutio­n to victims.

Mesika, 47, who has pleaded not guilty, referred all questions to his attorney, Bruce Harvey.

Harvey said there is no evidence to suggest that Mesika participat­ed in anything illegal. He added that the government’s own lab reports show that only a “minuscule” amount of Methastero­ne was found in the two products, raising the question of whether it was used intentiona­lly.

Of Houser’s plea, the attorney said: “If it comes down to a trial, we are prepared to contest the deal he made to save himself. Beware the man who points the bloody finger.”

Among the items cited by the government as subject to forfeiture are a 9,722-squarefoot riverfront home in Sandy Springs purchased by Mesika for $1.9 million, a 43-acre farm he and Houser bought together in Coweta County for $740,000 and 11 vehicles, including four Ferraris, two Porsches and a McLaren.

‘Calculated decision’

Because dietary supplement­s can enter the market without prior screening for safety and effectiven­ess, the FDA, responsibl­e for regulating them, is perpetuall­y challenged in trying to deal with problem products.

The upshot is an environmen­t in which those who would break the law see the lure of easy money outweighin­g the concern for getting caught.

“They are making a calculated decision that they are going to be able to avoid a criminal prosecutio­n and just take the hit and close up shop if the FDA shows up for an inspection,” said Ben England, a Maryland attorney who spent 17 years with FDA, including a stint as an agent in the criminal investigat­ions division. “In other words, they’re going to play their money and go as long as they can before they hit the wall.”

With that attitude holding sway, supplement­s containing designer steroids, sometimes known as prohormone­s, have become a huge part of the market.

First developed by chemists more than a decade ago to help elite athletes beat drug tests, designer steroids mimic the properties of known steroids. Technicall­y, they can be considered unapproved drugs. However, because many have yet to be classified as controlled substances, they have been openly sold as supplement­s by operators willing to risk the fines that can be levied for such conduct.

“If you want to make millions selling illegal stuff, we can start doing it tomorrow, my friend,” said Oliver Catlin, president of Banned Substances Control Group, a company that tests and analyzes supplement­s. “The pathway has been laid out. Who chooses to walk that pathway is the question.”

Criminal pasts

Neither Mesika nor Houser had any particular expertise in health or nutrition when they started manufactur­ing supplement­s. Mesika was a wholesale art dealer. Houser was a personal trainer. Both had criminal records.

Mesika, born in Israel and raised in New York City, pleaded guilty when he was 20 to a federal kidnapping charge after he, his brother and father abducted a man in New Orleans and took him to New York in an attempt to obtain $100,000 in ransom. Mesika’s sentence was five years’ probation.

After moving to Atlanta, he ran afoul of the law again, this time over an accusation that he stalked a former girlfriend.

Prosecutor­s in Indianapol­is, where the woman was then living, filed the charge in 2009 after Mesika messaged the woman more than 100 times in violation of a permanent family violence protective order. The woman had obtained the order after reporting that Mesika told her he had thoughts of blowing up her vehicle.

The charge was dismissed when Mesika agreed that he would have no contact with the woman for two years.

Houser, who grew up in Cobb County, was sentenced to a year in prison when he was 21 after he pleaded guilty to marijuana possession in Fulton County. The plea violated the terms of his probation from an earlier conviction for giving a false name to a police officer in Cobb.

At the sentencing hearing, Houser’s father said his son had been addicted to drugs since he was 15. He also disclosed that his son had been connected to two individual­s murdered during a drug-related dispute.

“The two people that were killed were friends of his who robbed another drug dealer,” John Wesley Houser III told the court. “He was in associatio­n with these people. He did not kill anybody.”

Houser’s drug problem resurfaced in 2014 when police in Gwinnett County stopped him for driving on the wrong side of the road and found a bottle containing Xanax, a highly addictive anti-anxiety drug, in his glove box. He pleaded guilty to possessing a controlled substance and received three years’ probation.

At that sentencing, Houser’s attorney, Sean McIlhinney, told the court that his client had spent the previous six months at an inpatient drug treatment facility.

‘Fully stocked’

The notion of making supplement­s began with Houser, who would blend products at the Roswell gym where he worked, and soon expanded into an elaborate business in which he and Mesika acquired raw materials and processed them into capsules. They operated out of a warehouse in Doraville as well as a 10,000-squarefoot facility in Norcross and had several corporate names.

Their most widely known company, DuraCap Labs, touted its ability to manufactur­e pre- and post-workout recovery products, fat burners, proteins and “all the popular nutraceuti­cals.”

“With the help of our fully stocked warehouse of raw ingredient­s and readyto-go products, we can move quickly to meet your needs,” the company’s website said.

By 2013 — just a year after formally going into business together — Mesika and Houser had made enough to invest in real estate, starting with the farm in Coweta County.

Jeffrey Towe, the owner, said Houser drove up one day in a black Maserati and asked to see the property, which includes a 8,280-square-foot house, horse barn and stock pond. A month later, Towe said, Houser returned with Mesika to buy the place, putting $200,000 down.

“Well, you know, I was concerned about how they were going to pay,” Towe said. “But with them putting (so much) down, I didn’t have a problem.”

Curious to learn more about Mesika and Houser’s business, Towe said he visited the DuraCap facility. He left impressed.

“They were moving pallets and pallets of products out of that facility,” he said. “The business was quite successful, given what I saw there.”

According to the government, Mesika and Houser invested in at least three other pieces of property, all modest homes in DeKalb County.

But storm clouds were looming. A break in an FDA investigat­ion in another state had turned up their names. They were on the agency’s radar.

Cooperatio­n, names

In 2012, FDA agents in Memphis began looking closely at Joseph De Melo, a supplement distributo­r based in the Dallas suburb of Carrollton. When a cooperatin­g witness agreed to make a phone call posing as a potential buyer, the agents struck gold.

Unaware that the call was being monitored, De Melo explained in detail how he managed to deal in designer steroids yet remain untouched by regulators.

The key, he said, was staying “ahead of the game” by working with compounds that had yet to be designated as controlled substances. He described one such product as “10 times stronger than testostero­ne.” He also stated that, although he had once manufactur­ed supplement­s himself, he had shifted to using third parties to avoid being targeted by the FDA.

Suddenly, the agents had leverage, and De Melo, who previously had spent time in prison for distributi­ng Ecstasy, was willing to cooperate.

During seven hours of debriefing­s, he identified seven others who were distributi­ng or manufactur­ing designer steroids.

De Melo, 61, ultimately pleaded guilty to distributi­ng roughly 40,000 pills containing steroids and was sentenced to 15 months in prison, half of what he could have received under federal sentencing guidelines. He was also ordered to forfeit more than $650,000.

“It’s a substantia­l industry, but it’s under the radar,” assistant U.S. Attorney Tony Arvin said, lauding De Melo at his sentencing hearing in April 2015 for providing significan­t informatio­n about other offenders. “It’s already had an impact on changing peoples’ conduct, which is of course what we want.”

Liver failure

Not long after gaining De Melo’s cooperatio­n, agents searched his offices in Texas. There, they found purchase orders for products from a company the government contends was controlled by Mesika and Houser called Adrenaline Nutrition Supplement­s. One order was for Mass Destructio­n.

De Melo had ordered the product as part of an arrangemen­t with Travis Edmundson, the owner of a supplement store in Wilson. Edmundson was developing his own brand of supplement­s under the name Blunt Force Nutrition. De Melo was supplying the products.

Mass Destructio­n, which touted its ability to provide “incredible size, incredible strength, incredible power,” was never distribute­d widely because only one batch of 800 bottles was made, according to Edmundson. There was a misspellin­g on the label — “capsules” was spelled “capsuless” — so most of the bottles were returned to De Melo, he said.

But several remained with the store owner, and two found their way to a health club in nearby Rocky Mount where Joyner, then working with a personal trainer, was looking for something to help jump-start a fitness program.

According to adverse event reports filed with the FDA, Joyner had used the product for three or four weeks when he began experienci­ng symptoms that included dark urine, abdominal pain, jaundice and dizziness. Initially, he was thought to have a urinary tract infection, but then it was discovered that his enzymes were elevated, and a liver biopsy was ordered.

He was diagnosed with acute liver failure at Duke University Medical Center and underwent the transplant there.

Shortly after Joyner’s surgery, the FDA learned of it from public health officials in North Carolina and issued a safety alert advising consumers to stop using Mass Destructio­n immediatel­y.

Joyner declined to be interviewe­d for this story. His attorney, Lynwood Evans, said he cannot discuss the situation because of his client’s lawsuit, which was filed in 2015 and remains unresolved.

It is unclear whether additional bottles of Mass Destructio­n were distribute­d by De Melo, Houser or Mesika. Houser’s plea agreement indicates that at least 3,600 units of Mutant Plexx, the other product containing steroids, were distribute­d.

DuraCap Labs has since been sold.

In an interview with the AJC, Edmundson said he relied on De Melo for everything regarding Mass Destructio­n, including choosing the ingredient­s, and had no knowledge of Mesika and Houser’s role until the FDA got involved.

“The person I paid for the product was Joe De Melo, and, as far as I knew, he made it,” he said. “I didn’t know (Mesika and Houser) had anything to do with it.”

Calling himself “very duped,” Edmundson said he has learned a tough lesson about the supplement industry.

“It’s sort of a business where people kind of do their own thing and there’s no oversight,” he said. “I guess you really have to look closely at who you’re doing business with.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE FDA ?? A North Carolina man suffered acute liver failure and needed a transplant two months after using Mass Destructio­n in October 2013.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE FDA A North Carolina man suffered acute liver failure and needed a transplant two months after using Mass Destructio­n in October 2013.
 ??  ?? Beny Mesika and Wes Houser purchased sports cars similar to these with the millions they made manufactur­ing dietary supplement­s that federal authoritie­s assert were actually anabolic steroids. Prosecutor­s contend that the vehicles are now subject to...
Beny Mesika and Wes Houser purchased sports cars similar to these with the millions they made manufactur­ing dietary supplement­s that federal authoritie­s assert were actually anabolic steroids. Prosecutor­s contend that the vehicles are now subject to...
 ?? DANNY ROBBINS / AJC ?? DuraCap Labs operated out of this office in Norcross and touted its ability to manufactur­e pre- and post-workout recovery products, fat burners, proteins and “all the popular nutraceuti­cals.”
DANNY ROBBINS / AJC DuraCap Labs operated out of this office in Norcross and touted its ability to manufactur­e pre- and post-workout recovery products, fat burners, proteins and “all the popular nutraceuti­cals.”
 ??  ??
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 ??  ?? Beny Mesika was a wholesale art dealer before he began manufactur­ing supplement­s.
Beny Mesika was a wholesale art dealer before he began manufactur­ing supplement­s.
 ??  ?? Wes Houser began making supplement­s by blending products at the gym where he worked.
Wes Houser began making supplement­s by blending products at the gym where he worked.

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