Detroit Free Press

Feds bust Detroit dark web drug ring

Woman pleads guilty to selling fake Xanax

- Tresa Baldas

As a helicopter swirled above, Carolyn Hernandez-Taylor went about her business at her brother’s house, hauling garbage bags from a back door to her car.

The bags were filled with fake Xanax, a dangerous, so-called “designer benzo” known as clonazolam, a research drug that’s illegal and unfit for human consumptio­n, yet alarmingly popular, the government says.

Busting those who sell it can be difficult because it’s typically peddled on the dark web, not street corners. That’s what Taylor and her brother did, court records show, though they weren’t as elusive as they thought.

The helicopter caught them in action. In U.S. District Court this month, Taylor, 29, of Detroit, pleaded guilty to running a clandestin­e drug lab out of her brother’s Detroit house, where the FBI last summer year seized millions of counterfei­t Xanax pills, cocaine, guns, $1 million in cryptocurr­ency, an industrial size drug mixer and a pill press. The machines could make up to 20,000 pills per hour, court records show.

How the dark web operation worked

The house was on Florida Street, and served as a distributi­on hub for a cocaine and counterfei­t pill operation that for years went by the name “opiateconn­ect” on the dark web marketplac­e, authoritie­s said. According to federal investigat­ors, opiateconn­ect had been a dark web drug vendor since at least 2016, though it wasn’t until 2018 that Detroit’s Dark Web Task Force with Homeland Security Investigat­ions identified Taylor’s brother as being the operator of the website.

At her guilty plea hearing on Thursday, Taylor admitted she was part of this online operation, which involved her picking up drugs from

her brother’s house, delivering them to an associate, who would then mail them to customers across the United States from the Lincoln Park post office.

“Investigat­ive findings have identified Taylor as one of the most active members of the opiateconn­ect organizati­on,” a Homeland Security agent wrote in an affidavit. “Taylor has been routinely observed spending considerab­le amounts of time, multiple days per week, at the suspected drug processing/packaging location used by opiateconn­ect.”

Taylor admitted to this in her plea agreement, which states: “Taylor was responsibl­e for recruiting individual­s to deliver packages/ parcels of drugs to the post office.”

Unbeknowns­t to Taylor, however, investigat­ors were on her tail, and watched her leave the drug house with the garbage bags in her Ford Fusion, and load them into her associate’s Jeep Patriot — sometimes in alleys, other times at her associate’s house in Lincoln Park.

Surveillan­ce was also conducted on the associate, who was seen mailing the packages at the post office, where federal investigat­ors retrieved the packages and tested the contents, “all of which contained drugs sold by opiateconn­ect, including cocaine and pressed Xanax,” the affidavit states.

Taylor and her brother were charged with multiple drug crimes in a January indictment. The associate who delivered the pills was not named in the indictment. Attorneys for Taylor and her brother could not be reached for comment.

“Counterfei­t pills pose a unique danger to this community, especially ones that have the appearance of a drug that is so regularly prescribed,” U.S. Attorney Dawn Ison stated in announcing Taylor’s guilty plea. “We will continue to investigat­e and aggressive­ly prosecute instances where those counterfei­t pills are manufactur­ed illegally and distribute­d in our district to keep our community safe.”

Brother still jailed

Taylor is out on bond as she awaits sentencing for her crime in October. She faces a mandatory minimum of five years in prison, and a maximum of 40 years.

Her brother, Victor Hernandez, remains jailed pending the outcome of his case. At the request of the prosecutio­n, a judge ordered Hernandez be detained, concluding he is a flight risk and a danger to the community.

While jailed, Hernandez asked to be tempoRCS. rarily released on a tether to attend his brother’s funeral — though the prosecutio­n objected, arguing:

“Hernandez was the leader and organizer of a substantia­l drug traffickin­g conspiracy. A search of his residence revealed industrial size pill press machines and mixers,” prosecutor­s wrote in a court filing, adding: “Hernandez is a felon, with a prior conviction for drug traffickin­g, and had loaded firearms throughout the

home, including a rifle with a bump stock modificati­on.”

The judge denied Hernandez’s request to attend his brother’s funeral.

“The Court sincerely empathizes with Mr. Hernandez over the loss of his brother,” U.S. District Judge Linda Parker wrote in her order. “However, due to the seriousnes­s of the pending charges against Mr. Hernandez ... the Court finds that a tether is not a viable option and no condition or combinatio­n of conditions of release are available ... that would reasonably assure the safety of any other person and the community.”

Feds go undercover on dark web

According to court documents, federal agents made multiple undercover buys from opiatenet to help bust the operation. For example, on Feb. 18, 2022, investigat­ors initiated an undercover purchase of cocaine from opiateconn­ect.

The purchase was for 3.5 grams of cocaine for $275, plus $10 shipping. The purchase was made with bitcoin.

That same day, the task force initiated surveillan­ce near the Florida Street drug lab, and the home of the associate who delivered the organizati­on’s drugs to the post office. They would eventually see Taylor meet her associate in an alley. Trunks opened and closed. The two then drove to the Lincoln Park post office, where the associate exited her Jeep and retrieved two large, full trash bags from the rear hatch area.

She entered the post office, mailed dozens of parcels and left.

Immediatel­y after, a federal agent entered the post office and reviewed dozens of packages, including one addressed to the undercover officer who had bought cocaine with bitcoin. In the package was cocaine.

The task force would conduct numerous more undercover buys, and inspect the packages as they showed up at the Lincoln Park post office, where they would find parcels containing cocaine and green pills, which turned out to be clonazolam. Continuous surveillan­ce of Taylor’s Ford Fusion, the Florida Street house and the post office would trigger an eventual raid of the house.

On Aug. 23, 2022, the Detroit Dark Web Task Force entered the home with a search warrant, and found what they suspected was there: cocaine, counterfei­t Xanax, pill press machines, mixers and cryptocurr­ency.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one of the many dangers of clonazolam its resistance to drugs used to reverse overdoses. For example, naloxone will reverse opioid overdose symptoms, but not clonazolam, leading to risk for respirator­y failure or death.

Still, the demand for this designer drug is high, though officials believe they’re making some headway in catching and prosecutin­g those who are selling it online.

In Florida, a Cape Coral man pleaded h guilty on June 22 to running a counterfei­t drug operation out of his home, where federal agents found a five-gallon bucket filled with 30 pounds of counterfei­t Xanax pills — which actually contained clonazolam — a bucket containing 20 pounds of a pill binding agent and pill dyes. They also found a large commercial­grade pill press in the garage, and hundreds of counterfei­t oxycodone pills on a nearby shelf containing fentanyl.

In Virginia, a Virginia Beach man pleaded h guilty in 2021, to dealing counterfei­t Xanax pills on the dark web following a federal raid of his home, where investigat­ors found 2,400 grams of white pills, two glass containers with white powder and packing material. The pills were clonazolam. The white powder contained cocaine.

In 2020, a California man pleaded guilty to h smuggling illegal drugs into the U.S. — including clonazolam — pressing them into pills and then selling them to customers across the country through his online business Domestic He admitted knowing the pills carried risks of dependency, toxicity, and fatal overdose.

“Counterfei­t pills pose a unique danger to this community, especially ones that have the appearance of a drug that is so regularly prescribed.”

Dawn Ison

U.S. attorney

The difficulty of busting dealers on the dark web

Former federal prosecutor Mark Chutkow, who led the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Detroit, says the dark web has become an increasing­ly popular venue for illegal drug transactio­ns.

“It’s perceived as less risky than dealing drugs hand-to-hand or in open-air drug markets,” Chutkow explained. “In the old days, law enforcemen­t officers tracked down drug dealers through informants, phone usage, surveillan­ce and undercover buys.”

But that’s a lot harder to do on the dark web, Chutkow said, because the participan­ts’ identities and locations are obscured through use of cryptocurr­ency and encryption technologi­es that anonymize servers and IP addresses.

“It’s easy to get ripped off on these online marketplac­es, but drug dealers see it as an acceptable cost of doing business, preferable to getting caught by law enforcemen­t or killed by rival drug gangs,” said Chutkow, who joined the Dykema law firm last year after serving 24 years as a federal prosecutor.

Chutkow said these cases require a new breed of tech-savvy investigat­ors and prosecutor­s, noting, “You can’t just cultivate or flip the local drug courier or surveil the street corner known for drug buys.

“It requires totally different informants and surveillan­ce techniques, and sophistica­ted forensic software to track down hidden marketplac­es and transactio­ns,” Chutkow said.

On the flip side, Chutkow added, if investigat­ors can identify the drug dealers and how they do business, they can conduct drug transactio­ns through informants or undercover agents, creating an electronic paper trail that’s hard to dispute at trial.

That’s what happened in the Detroit case. “The federal government is getting better at stopping this type of crime,” Chutkow said, adding sophistica­ted forensics software and closer ties with foreign law enforcemen­t officials who can help track down the source of drugs and money is helping fight this problem.

“But successful drug trafficker­s constantly adapt their tactics to evade law enforcemen­t. It’s the age-old game of cat and mouse,” Chutkow said. “As long as there’s money to made in selling illegal drugs, there will be people who invest the time and resources in inventing new ways to do it and ambitious law enforcemen­t officials who will chase them down and try to hold them accountabl­e.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States