USA TODAY US Edition

Couple accused of sending opiate via mail

- Sarah Brookbank NORWOOD Contributi­ng: Terry DeMio, The Cincinnati Enquirer

A Cincinnati-area couple used the Postal Service for next-day delivery of one of the most dangerous drugs on the market, federal officials said.

James Halpin, 30, and Grace Bosworth, 38, stand accused of smuggling, importing and distributi­ng fentanyl, a deadly synthetic opiate, and are awaiting court appearance­s, federal agents said Monday.

They would charge $35 for next-day shipping, court documents show. Undercover officers say they ordered drugs off of the murkiest part of the Internet called the dark Web.

A key to cracking the case: Authoritie­s compared the handwritin­g on a shipping label to that found on Bosworth’s divorce papers.

In late May, with the approval from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Cleveland, a number of undercover law enforcemen­t agencies started making purchases from fentanyl vendors on the dark Web, a network of websites searchable only using identity-masking software. As a result, sites on the dark Web can’t be found through search engines.

Several high-profile cases involving child pornograph­y, drugs, weapons and human traffickin­g have all been tied to dark Web activity.

Authoritie­s say Halpin and Bosworth operated an online storefront on the dark Web as a way for people to order fentanyl, which then would be shipped using the U.S. Postal Service. They are also accused of “routinely” receiving shipments of drugs from Canada.

The Postal Service serves as a primary conduit for such drugs coming into the United States, mostly from China, according to law-enforcemen­t officials.

Halpin received a lot of internatio­nal mail at his address, and he routinely sent mail to people all over the country, in- spectors learned. Bosworth, who lives with Halpin in a house she owns, was traced to the packages through her handwritin­g, documents said.

On June 6, when a package from Montreal arrived at a Norwood post office with the couple’s address, the contents were sent to the Hamilton County Coroner’s Office for testing.

The package was found to contain 5 grams of a mixture of fentanyl, carfentani­l and other fentanyl analogs, according to court documents. Five grams is about one teaspoon.

When Halpin came to the post office the next day to pick up the package and ship out others, authoritie­s arrested him. At the time of his arrest, Halpin was found with “untested fentanyl” in a tobacco snuff can, documents said.

Halpin admitted to police that he had shipped the packages but said Bosworth was the one who had packaged, bought and sold the drugs, according to agents. Halpin told investigat­ors they had been receiving the packages of drugs from Canada weekly since March, and that each contained at least 2 grams of fentanyl.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN, AP ?? Two milligrams of fentanyl, as shown in this vial, will kill a human if ingested.
CLIFF OWEN, AP Two milligrams of fentanyl, as shown in this vial, will kill a human if ingested.

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