The Mercury News

Cops wage psychologi­cal warfare against online drug bazaars

- By Raphael Satter and Frank Bajak The Associated Press

In an innovative blow to illicit internet commerce, cyberpolic­e shut down the world’s leading “darknet” marketplac­e — then quietly seized a second bazaar to amass intelligen­ce on illicit drug merchants and buyers.

AlphaBay, formerly the internet’s largest darknet site, had already gone offline July 5 with the arrest in Thailand of its alleged creator and administra­tor. But on Thursday, European law enforcemen­t revealed that Dutch cyberpolic­e had for a month been running Hansa Market. Like AlphaBay, Hansa operated in the darknet, an anonymityf­riendly internet netherworl­d inaccessib­le to standard browsers.

AlphaBay’s users had flocked to Hansa, which is largely based in the Netherland­s. The announceme­nts Thursday on both sides of the Atlantic sowed panic among the sites’ tech-savvy buyers and vendors.

Darkness over darknet

“The cryptomark­et community (is) spooked,” said darknet researcher Patrick Shortis, of Brunel University in London. “Reddit boards are filled with users asking questions about their orders.”

In Washington, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions deemed the operation “the largest darknet marketplac­e takedown in history.”

Darknet vendors are “pouring fuel on the fire of the national drug epidemic,” he said, specifical­ly citing cases of two U.S. teenagers killed this year; one a 13-year-old Utah boy, by overdoses of synthetic opioids purchased on AlphaBay.

More than two-thirds of the quarter million listings on the two sites were for illegal drugs, said Sessions. Other illicit wares for sale included weapons, counterfei­t and stolen identifica­tion and malware.

The police agency Europol estimates AlphaBay did $1 billion in business after its 2014 creation.

Dead in prison

A California indictment named AlphaBay’s founder as Alexandre Cazes, a 25-year-old Canadian who died in Thai police custody on July 12. The country’s narcotics police chief told reporters Cazes hanged himself in jail just prior to a scheduled court hearing. He’d been arrested with DEA and FBI assistance.

Cazes amassed a $23 million fortune, much of it in digital currencies, according to court documents. He bought real estate and luxury cars, including a $900,000 Lamborghin­i, and pursued “economic citizenshi­p” in Liechtenst­ein, Cyprus and Thailand.

He used what he claimed was a web design company, EBX Technologi­es, as a front, the indictment said.

Just two other arrests were announced Thursday. Both were of Hansa system administra­tors in the German town of Siegen, who were taken into custody in June. Europol spokeswoma­n Claire Georges said they were not named under privacy law.

The U.S. indictment lists several AlphaBay co-conspirato­rs by title but not name. They include a security chief, a public relations manager and moderators. A U.S. attorney handling the case, Grant Rabenn, would not comment on whether additional arrests were expected.

Psychologi­cal warfare

Nicolas Christin, a darknet expert at Carnegie Mellon University, called the one-two takedown punch “psychologi­cal warfare.”

“It is definitely going to create a bit of chaos,” he said, though after takedowns in the past buyers and sellers move to other former second-tier sites after a few weeks of turmoil.

But this time, Dutch police have upped the ante by craftily tracking darknet users, and that’s expected to yield future arrests.

They began running the Hansa site on June 20, impersonat­ing its administra­tors, collecting usernames and passwords, logging data on thousands of drug sales and informing local police in nations where shipments would be arriving. Dutch cybercrime prosecutor Martijn Egberts said Dutch police had scooped up some 10,000 addresses for Hansa buyers outside Holland.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Europol Executive Director Robert Mark Wainwright, center, accompanie­d by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, right, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announces an internatio­nal cybercrime operation that dealt a major blow to darknet drug bazaars.
ANDREW HARNIK — ASSOCIATED PRESS Europol Executive Director Robert Mark Wainwright, center, accompanie­d by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, right, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announces an internatio­nal cybercrime operation that dealt a major blow to darknet drug bazaars.

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