The Star Malaysia - Star2

Sting nets 179 dark web sellers

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A GLOBAL police sting has netted 179 vendors involved in selling opioids, methamphet­amine and other illegal goods on the Internet undergroun­d, in what officials of Europol said put an end to the “golden age” of dark web markets.

Over nine months Operation Disruptor seized 500kg of drugs including cocaine, heroin, oxycodone and methamphet­amine, more than Us$6.5mil (Rm26.9mil) in cash and online currencies, as well as 64 guns, Europe’s police agency said.

Led by the German federal criminal police, the operation saw law agencies pounce in Austria, Britain, the Netherland­s, Sweden and the United States, breaking up networks of buyers and sellers of narcotics and other illegal goods on the Internet’s premium anonymous bazaars including Alphabay, Dream, Wallstreet, Nightmare, Empire, White House and others.

“This takedown provided investigat­ors with ... data and materials to identify suspects behind dark web accounts used for illegal activity,” Europol said in a statement.

Some 121 suspects were arrested in the US, followed by 42 in Germany, eight in the Netherland­s, four in Britain, three in Austria, and one in Sweden.

A number of investigat­ions were still ongoing, Europol said. Operation Disruptor followed a law agency shutdown in May 2019 of the Wall Street Market, the second largest dark web exchange, which had more than 1.1 million users and 5,400 vendors.

“Today’s announceme­nt sends a strong message to criminals buying and selling illicit goods on the dark web,” said Edvardas Sileris, who heads Europol’s EC3 cybercrime centre.

“The hidden Internet is no longer hidden and your anonymous activity is not anonymous,” Sileris said, with Europol adding “the golden age of the dark web marketplac­e is over”.

US Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen said the dark web fed an opioid addiction crisis that caused more than 1,000 overdose deaths a week in 2018 in the US alone, and has grown worse with the Covid-19 pandemic.

The arrests counted by the US included two made in Canada, where one suspect allegedly procured highly dangerous fentanyl analogues from China to mail to US buyers. The drugs were traced to at least two overdoses, including one death. US officials also arrested two men, including a pharmacist, who sold prescripti­on opioids over the dark web and had plotted to firebomb a competitor pharmacy in Nebraska.

The men were arrested last April as they waited for an end to Covid-19 restrictio­ns to carry out the attack.

US officials made clear they were able to track individual­s and virtual currency transactio­ns despite the protection­s offered by the anonymous Tor gateway underpinni­ng the dark web.

“Operation Disruptor demonstrat­es the ability of DEA and our partners to outpace these digital criminals in this ever-changing domain, by implementi­ng innovative ways to identify trafficker­s attempting to operate anonymousl­y and disrupt these criminal enterprise­s,” said Timothy Shea, acting administra­tor of the US Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

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