Three New Jersey men were charged in Manhattan with setting up a virtual storefront in a hidden corner of the internet that sold illicit drugs
NEW YORK — In 2017, the Manhattan district attorney’s office received a tip: Unusually large amounts of cash were being withdrawn from ATMs throughout the city, including a series of transactions at a special teller machine that converted cryptocurrency to cash.
Prosecutors did not quite know what they had but worked to identify precisely who had withdrawn the money, which exceeded $1 million.
What resulted was a two-year investigation that uncovered a multimillion-dollar drug operation on the dark web, a corner of the internet people can visit anonymously with special browsers and make purchases with virtual currencies like bitcoin and Ethereum.
In recent years, drug trafficking on the dark web has exploded as drug traffickers and other criminals have discovered that its anonymity makes it ideal for illicit transactions using cryptocurrencies.
“We have a cybercrime crisis that’s not yet fully appreciated,” Cyrus Vance Jr., the Manhattan district attorney, said at a news conference.
Prosecutors said three New Jersey men were behind an online store called Sinmed that sold and shipped illegal drugs to buyers in 43 states, Puerto Rico and Washington. Their products included heroin-laced fentanyl, counterfeit Xanax tablets, ketamine, LSD, date-rape drug GHB, steroids and methamphetamine.
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