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  3. HSI New York, Federal Partners Announce Charges Against 18 Defendants in Scheme to Manufacture, Distribute Millions of Deadly Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals Through Fake Online Pharmacies

HSI New York, Federal Partners Announce Charges Against 18 Defendants in Scheme to Manufacture, Distribute Millions of Deadly Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals Through Fake Online Pharmacies

Release Date: October 1, 2024

Francisco Alberto Lopez Reyes aka Frank led scheme that sold fentanyl and methamphetamine pills to tens of thousands of unsuspecting victims across the country, causing numerous injuries and death

NEW YORK — Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Executive Associate Director Katrina W. Berger, HSI New York Special Agent in Charge William S. Walker, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams, DEA Administrator Anne Milgram, DEA New York Special Agent in Charge Frank A. Tarentino III and U.S. Postal Inspection Service New York Inspector in Charge Daniel B. Brubaker announced Sept. 30 the unsealing of charges against Francisco Alberto Lopez Reyes aka Frank and 17 other defendants located in the United States, the Dominican Republic and India for their involvement in a scheme to advertise, sell, manufacture and ship millions of deadly pills disguised as legitimate pharmaceuticals.

The counterfeit pills were purchased by tens of thousands of victims from fake online pharmacies run by Lopez Reyes and his co-conspirators. At least nine of the victims later died of narcotics poisoning. Federal authorities have seized nine website domains used by the defendants and their co-conspirators to sell counterfeit pills, four of which are named in the indictment. The case is assigned to U.S. District Judge John P. Cronan.

“Trafficking counterfeit pharmaceuticals is not just a crime; it is a threat to public health,” said Berger. “HSI is committed to working with our partners to stop those who poison our neighborhoods for the sake of profit.”

“In just the last few months, Homeland Security Investigations agents, analysts and task force officers in New York City have intercepted hundreds of pounds of fentanyl and other deadly narcotics,” said Walker. “Investigators uncovered illicit clandestine drug labs operating in residential basements and seized fentanyl from parcel facilities where day-to-day mail is processed. We further uncovered strategies allegedly used by those who deal death to exploit parcel systems in furtherance of their illegal enterprise. HSI is on the front lines of the fentanyl epidemic, doing everything in our power to prevent the deadly narcotic from reaching just one more victim. We stand shoulder-to-shoulder with grieving families who were forced to say goodbye to their loved ones too soon.”

Walker praised the outstanding investigative work of the El Dorado Task Force’s International Narcotics and Money Laundering Unit, which comprises law enforcement officers and investigators from HSI, the DEA, the New York City Police Department, the New York State Police, the USPIS, the IRS and the Kings County District Attorney’s Office; the New York City Border Enforcement Security Task Force Contraband Group; the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces’ New York Strike Force; the USPIS New York Division’s Contraband Interdiction and Investigations Team; and the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs. Walker also thanked HSI’s Santo Domingo and Memphis field offices and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey for their assistance.

According to the investigation and the allegations contained in the indictments, the proliferation of unregulated online pharmacies has fueled the nation’s fentanyl epidemic, enabling drug traffickers to peddle direct-to-consumer counterfeit pharmaceuticals that are devoid of the medication they purport to contain and instead comprise deadly narcotics like fentanyl and its analogs.

For at least the last two and a half years, a network of individuals located in the United States, the Dominican Republic, India and elsewhere have exploited Americans’ reliance on online pharmacies by advertising, selling, manufacturing and shipping through the mail millions of unregulated counterfeit prescription pills to tens of thousands of victims. Instead of prescription drugs at a bargain, what customers actually received were phony pills made of fentanyl, para-fluorofentanyl — an analog of fentanyl — and methamphetamine. Shaped, dyed and stamped to be indistinguishable from actual prescription medication, these tablets were in fact manufactured by the defendants in industrial-scale milling facilities, or pill mills, located in the basements of several residential buildings in, among other places, Manhattan and the Bronx, New York.

As part of this scheme, the defendants shipped counterfeit pharmaceuticals to victims across the United States and around the world, including in all 50 U.S. states, Washington, D.C., the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Germany and Slovenia. The victims of this criminal enterprise range in age from at least 23 to 77 years old. They include veterans, doctors, lawyers, musicians, artists, politicians, economists, restaurant managers, personal trainers, dancers, former schoolteachers, administrative executives and first responders, among others.

Between in or about August 2023 and in or about June 2024, at least nine victims — all of whom purchased counterfeit prescription pills from the defendants — died of narcotics poisoning. One victim, a 45-year-old woman, was a veteran who had served for 12 years in the U.S. Army National Guard. She believed she was purchasing 30-milligram oxycodone, also known as “M30s,” from the defendants’ online pharmacy, but the pills were, in fact, made of fentanyl and para-fluorofentanyl. After receiving the pills, she conducted research to attempt to learn whether the pills were genuine, but, because the defendants made the pills look real, she was unable to tell the difference. Five days after receiving counterfeit oxycodone pills advertised, sold, manufactured and shipped by the defendants, she died from acute fentanyl intoxication. The fake oxycodone pills that killed her, which were recovered from her bedside, are pictured here.

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The fake oxycodone pills that killed her, which were recovered from her bedside, are pictured here.

Lopez Reyes led the enterprise, orchestrating and controlling every facet of the scheme from the Dominican Republic. With his co-conspirators, Lopez Reyes set up dozens of online pharmacy websites designed to appear legitimate in to lure customers into buying, at reduced prices, tablets of fentanyl, para-fluorofentanyl and methamphetamine disguised as real prescription medications, including oxycodone, hydrocodone, Adderall and Xanax, among others. Lopez Reyes also relied on others, including Sadiq Abbas Habib Sayyed aka Rakesh Sharma aka Jonathan Acosta; Khizar Mohammad Iqbal Shaikh; and Alba Gonzalez to sell counterfeit pills to Americans over the internet and through encrypted messaging platforms. The homepage of one such website, Curecog.com, is pictured here.

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The homepage of one such website, Curecog.com, is pictured here.

Curecog purported to be a “US-based online pharma store,” “approved by the FDA” which “serve[s] affordable medicines . . . approved by specialists and manufactured by trusted brands.” Curecog, however, was neither legitimate nor FDA-approved. Instead, Curecog was a fraudulent storefront that peddled the defendants’ controlled substances, including fentanyl.

To fulfill pill orders, Lopez Reyes enlisted Juan Efren Paulino aka Freddy and Juan Moises Perez Mendez aka Caballero as his principal lieutenants to oversee the operation of multiple pill mills in New York City. At those pill mills, workers used dyes with specific colors and specialized equipment with custom molds to press powdered narcotics to mimic the color, shape, size and markings of commercially manufactured prescription pills at rates of up to 100,000 pills every 12 hours. Law enforcement raided at least three of these pill mills and two other narcotics storage locations, seizing approximately 625,000 counterfeit pills — the majority of which contained fentanyl, para-fluorofentanyl or methamphetamine — 10 industrial pill presses, commercial mixers, industrial-grade gas masks and more. At these facilities, law enforcement also seized staggering quantities of not yet processed narcotics. In total, law enforcement seized approximately 255 pounds of para-fluorofentanyl, 100 pounds of fentanyl and 215 pounds of methamphetamine, in pill, powder and crystal form. Each of these seizures were a mere snapshot in time, representing only a single day’s working supply at these pill mills and storage locations. Multiple defendants — including Efren Paulino, Perez Mendez, Wellington Eustate Espinal aka Roni, Heriberto Eustate Espinal aka Daulin, Eusebio Peralta Bautista aka Luis Collazo Santos, Hector Bienvenido Feliz Feliz aka Tacoma, and Luis Paulino — worked at these pill mills day and night. A photograph of the over 190,000 pills seized from just one of the defendants’ pill mills is pictured here.

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A photograph of the over 190,000 pills seized from just one of the defendants’ pill mills is pictured here.

After the defendants manufactured the counterfeit pills containing fentanyl and methamphetamine, a network of shippers, including Miguel Concepcion Brito, Cynthia Onega, Edward Eustate Jimenez aka Chino, Robert Junior Ramos Henriquez aka Junior aka Kiko, Jose Concepcion Brito, Angel Valdez Brito, and Wilianyi Almanzar Polanco packaged and mailed the pills to customers across the country at the direction of Lopez Reyes, who specified to whom and where to ship particular types and quantities of pills. After orders were delivered, the defendants and their co-conspirators bombarded customers with aggressive and manipulative marketing tactics to pressure their victims to order more illegal pills, including by providing unsolicited free samples via mail of counterfeit pills containing addictive and deadly fentanyl and near-daily outreach by phone calls and text messages. One victim had to block up to 30 phone numbers in an effort to stop the harassment.

“The proliferation of fake online pharmacies is fueling this nation’s fentanyl epidemic,” said Williams. “As alleged, Francisco Lopez Reyes aka Frank and his lieutenants have run a global network of these websites and aggressively marketed, manufactured, sold, and distributed millions of deadly fentanyl pills meant to mimic legitimate prescription drugs. The victims of the scheme include people from all walks of life — people of all ages and occupations — from all 50 states, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Germany and Slovenia. At least nine victims who purchased counterfeit pills from the defendants died of narcotics poisoning, including a 45-year-old army veteran who thought she was purchasing real oxycodone. Today’s charges show this office’s unrelenting commitment to fighting the proliferation of fentanyl and counterfeit pharmaceuticals. I commend the career prosecutors of the Southern District of New York and our partners at the Drug Enforcement Administration, Homeland Security Investigations and the United States Postal Inspection Service for their tireless efforts to bring those poisoning our communities to justice.”

“The 18 defendants in this case operated a sophisticated network of fake online pharmacies and pill mills in India, the Dominican Republic and the United States that preyed on Americans who believed they were purchasing legitimate medications from legitimate pharmacies,” said Milgram. “The defendants exploited the online pharmacy market to sell counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl and methamphetamine to unsuspecting victims. These individuals sold millions of dangerous fake pills to victims in every U.S. state and the District of Columbia. The defendants did this to make money by driving addiction with deadly, highly addictive fentanyl. The DEA is relentlessly focused on saving lives by finding these criminal networks and shutting them down.”

“Over the past year, our DEA New York team, along with our law enforcement partners, targeted those individuals involved in the operation of illegal pill mills in the Bronx and Manhattan, producing deadly fake pills made up of fentanyl and methamphetamine,” said Tarentino. “This investigation demonstrates the complexity and global influence that predatory drug trafficking organizations have on our communities, families and young people, many times leaving a trail of devastation in its path.”

“We are proud to be working with our law enforcement partners on this impactful case,” said Brubaker. “These arrests represent the progress we have made to disrupt and ultimately dismantle this illegal narcotics distribution network. The defendants allegedly took advantage of the online pharmaceutical space and preyed upon innocent victims who were in need of medication — people suffering with legitimate ailments. Postal inspectors will constantly be vigilant in this fight against fentanyl and all illicit drugs, to preserve the integrity of the mail and, most importantly, to keep our employees and the American public safe.”

The charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Last Updated: 10/01/2024
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