Couldn't happen to a nicer fella:
A 23-year-old Taiwanese man was expected in federal court Monday afternoon to face charges of owning and operating the dark web narcotics marketplace Incognito Market.
Rui-Siang Lin was arrested on Friday at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, the Department of Justice said in a news release. He allegedly supervised all of Incognito Market’s operations, “including its employees, vendors, and customers, and had ultimate decision-making authority over every aspect of the multimillion-dollar operation,” the DOJ said.
Prosecutors said that the market, beginning in 2020, sold $100 million of controlled substances, “including hundreds of kilograms of cocaine and methamphetamines” as well as bogus prescription drugs like mislabeled oxycodone.
Lin, who allegedly used the aliases Pharoah and faro, faces charges that include running a criminal enterprise and money laundering.
Incognito suddenly closed in March and the operator extorted all of its customers and vendors with fees of $100 to $20,000 to not publish information about their transactions. “YES, THIS IS AN EXTORTION!!” Lin wrote, according to the unsealed indictment against him.
A 23-year-old Taiwanese man was expected in federal court Monday afternoon to face charges of owning and operating the dark web narcotics marketplace Incognito Market.
Rui-Siang Lin was arrested on Friday at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, the Department of Justice said in a news release. He allegedly supervised all of Incognito Market’s operations, “including its employees, vendors, and customers, and had ultimate decision-making authority over every aspect of the multimillion-dollar operation,” the DOJ said.
Prosecutors said that the market, beginning in 2020, sold $100 million of controlled substances, “including hundreds of kilograms of cocaine and methamphetamines” as well as bogus prescription drugs like mislabeled oxycodone.
Lin, who allegedly used the aliases Pharoah and faro, faces charges that include running a criminal enterprise and money laundering.
Incognito suddenly closed in March and the operator extorted all of its customers and vendors with fees of $100 to $20,000 to not publish information about their transactions. “YES, THIS IS AN EXTORTION!!” Lin wrote, according to the unsealed indictment against him.