Illicit Internet pharmacies called '21st-century drug traffickers

erosion

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A 4-foot-tall, overweight, alcoholic, heroin-addicted airline pilot placed an order on a Web site for steroids, Ritalin and methadone, noting in the online questionnaire that he wanted "to get high to fly."

Two days later, the package arrived.

Unfortunately for Dr. David Stephenson, who ran the site from his home near Syracuse, the "pilot" was actually a New York state investigator looking to see just how difficult it was to buy controlled substances online without ever seeing a physician, a crime in that state and several others.

Stephenson was arrested -- he later pleaded guilty -- and it became shockingly clear that getting highly addictive drugs over the Internet was as easy as ordering a book.

That first arrest in 2005 sparked what is now a nationwide dragnet by Albany County, N.Y., prosecutors into the illicit sale of steroids entering New York. Twenty people from three states -- Florida, Texas and New York -- have been indicted, and authorities are promising more arrests.

A similar federal prosecution is under way in Rhode Island, and investigators in Florida and Texas are considering their own state charges.

While some professional athletes have been linked to the scandal as drug purchasers -- baseball's Jose Canseco and John Rocker, former heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, and 1996 Olympic wrestling gold medalist Kurt Angle, among them -- authorities have made it clear they're concerned only with prosecuting distributors at this point, not users.

Experts say the steroids sting reveals just a portion of the overall problem with rogue online pharmacies and shady doctors doling out everything from painkillers to sedatives, no physical exam required.

"They're the new 21st-century drug traffickers," said Garrison Courtney, a Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman.

It's a new front in the war on drugs -- from the streets to the World Wide Web.

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Studies show prescription drug abuse in the United States is second only to marijuana -- surpassing cocaine, crack and heroin, combined.

The number of Americans abusing prescription drugs, mostly painkillers, nearly doubled from 7.8 million in 1992 to 15.1 million in 2003, according to the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University.

Experts can't say with certainty that the increase in prescription drug abuse is directly linked to online availability, but logic dictates a relation.

"All we know is that the Internet is a wide open channel of illegal distribution of prescription drugs," said Susan Foster, the center's vice president. "Just the sheer availability of these drugs has got to have something to do with it."

Poisoning deaths, mostly from prescription drug overdoses, were second only to car crashes as the cause of unintentional fatalities in the U.S. in 2004, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The numbers of such deaths nearly doubled between 1999 and 2004, from 12,186 to 20,950

"We cannot afford to let the trend continue," said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health. "The consequences are devastating."


And while there are legal online pharmacies that require pre-existing prescriptions and doctor-patient relationships, illicit sites come and go by the hour, making the networks difficult to track.

Some sites have begun using questionnaires for the appearance that doctors are actually evaluating patients before prescribing medications, but even that is illegal in many states.

In New York and Florida, for example, it is illegal for a doctor or a pharmacy to dole out any prescription drugs to a patient without a previous physical exam. Laws in the state of Utah are a bit less clear. There, doctors can prescribe drugs such as Viagra without an exam, but it is illegal to prescribe other controlled substances such as painkillers absent a pre-existing physician relationship.

In such states, it's easier for online pharmacies to operate under a veil of legitimacy while in some cases slipping through illicit sales under the radar.

The steroids case also involves human growth hormone, a rarely prescribed drug restricted under federal law for specified medical uses, such as wasting disease associated with AIDS. It is not approved for bodybuilding or for enhanced athletic ability, as New York authorities allege it was sold for in their case.

Meanwhile, Congress has not kept up with the rapidly changing venue for illicit sales of all prescription drugs.

"These laws were written before the Internet so they didn't envision the kind of drug trading we're seeing now," Foster said.

Much of the law is open to interpretation.

According to the section used by federal authorities in prosecuting such cases, any prescription written by a doctor for a controlled substance "must be issued for a legitimate medical purpose ... in the usual course of his professional practice."

There is no specific wording that calls for any doctor-patient relationship yet federal authorities still rely on juries to use common sense when determining whether drugs were prescribed for legitimate purposes. Note the 4-foot-tall, overweight, alcoholic, heroin-addicted airline pilot.

The only real clarity is that U.S. pharmacies cannot fill prescriptions written by physicians outside the country, and that it is illegal to provide any controlled substance without a prescription.

"Federal laws are still catching up," said the DEA's Courtney.

Two years ago, the DEA created its Virtual Enforcement Initiative. The agency has since arrested dozens of suspects and shut down thousands of illicit drug-peddling Web sites. However, prosecutions can be sketchy at times with the absence of federal language specifically citing the crimes committed.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., announced earlier this month that he would introduce legislation clarifying federal law when it comes to doctors prescribing controlled substances without first having met their patients.

The physicians who are hired by the online distributors "have become no more than drug dealers," Schumer said.

And much like authorities trolling the Internet for child predators, it's a virtual game of hit or miss.

"How do you, with millions upon millions of sites, look at every single one? You just can't," Courtney said.

------

Back in Albany, the investigation is centered on Signature Pharmacy, an Orlando, Fla., business that allegedly served as a clearinghouse for up to 50 Web sites and clinics doling out steroids and other controlled substances nationwide. Authorities say the company had $40 million in sales last year, up from $500,000 in 2002.

The business's top four executives have been indicted. All have denied wrongdoing.

For Christopher Baynes, assistant Albany County district attorney and lead prosecutor on the case, it's about more than one sting. It's about shutting down the networks.

"It's not like going after Signature is going to keep people from getting drugs on the Internet, but it is going to send a ripple effect throughout their section of the marketplace," Baynes said.

"If we take down one pharmacy, then a couple of pharmacies and a couple of doctors, other people may very well decide this isn't worth it," Baynes added. "You can very well change an industry. By taking a few people down, the rest of them may say, 'You know what, I'd rather sell Amway products.'"

Illicit Internet pharmacies called '21st-century drug traffickers
Associated Press
March 18, 2007
Link
 
hmmm... so all these spam emails offering me cialis, viagra and ritalin are actually legit?

irate
 
n4k33n said:
A 4-foot-tall, overweight, alcoholic, heroin-addicted airline pilot placed an order on a Web site for steroids, Ritalin and methadone...


When I saw that my heart started pounding in freight... I was like How the FUCK did they single out My Order and publish it without me getting arrested?!?!... the police might be right outside my door!!!

But then I saw that the investigators had coincidentally given a similar description... thank god.
 
sn0wburt0n said:
hmmm... so all these spam emails offering me cialis, viagra and ritalin are actually legit?

irate
Yep, they are real, and like the article states, they come and go constantly. They are illegal in most states, and a lot of them will take your money and run.
 
I think they say thousands because 1 pharmacy will have 100 different fronts on the internet, so if you shut down a few, it adds up to "thousands"
 
n4k33n said:
It's a new front in the war on drugs -- from the streets to the World Wide Web.

I think this is better than the streets. This cuts down (even if slightly) on buying drugs from the streets, making neighborhoods cleaner/safer, and people who order online are usually 18yr+, so less chance minor will be sold drugs.
 
HottButtaz said:
When I saw that my heart started pounding in freight... I was like How the FUCK did they single out My Order and publish it without me getting arrested?!?!... the police might be right outside my door!!!

But then I saw that the investigators had coincidentally given a similar description... thank god.

hahahahaha...that's hilarious.
 
"If we take down one pharmacy, then a couple of pharmacies and a couple of doctors, other people may very well decide this isn't worth it," Baynes added. "You can very well change an industry. By taking a few people down, the rest of them may say, 'You know what, I'd rather sell Amway products.'"
OR they get smarter and stop selling to people who claim to be 4-foot tall, alcoholic, heroin addicted airline pilots who intend to "get high to fly".

Suppose the government does use more of it's resources to prevent the use and distribution of prescription pharmaceuticals, we'll only see a rise in use of "illegal street drugs" again.
 
That link to the viagra order is hillarious. Any other informtation you would like to share? "I once masturbated into a grapefruit"

Its viagra, that shit isnt even scheduled...
Maybe ill have to start reading those spam emails more often, i mean shit, if a 4 foot tall overwieght alcoholoic heroin addict can order methadone no problem, why cant everyone?
 
isn't it odd how some big time drug traffickers can stay in public awareness and get off scot free (read: Jack Daniels and his Merry Pranksters)
 
goddamn it. why do i have to live in ny. this pisses me off, the internet is a great tool and sure, people that are actually midgets flying airlines should not be on steroids, methylphenidate, and methadone while flying the plane.. but another addition to WAR ON DRUGS really just pisses me off.
 
Trogdor said:
Less chance of minors being sold drugs by adults, or easier access to drugs by minors?

"Are you over 18 years of age, yes or no?" *click*

Well for most people I know (excluding rich kids) those under 18 don't have credit cards, or debit cards, or anything such to order from online, and they need there parents to order stuff for them. It's a hindrance in the way of minors getting a hold of drugs. Is it still possible they still will? Of course.
 
It's sort of inevitable. This happened a few years ago with some steroid labs. It will blow over,however, there are people with a vested interest in making it a hassle to get high. Some of those NROP will be a thing of the past I bet.

Alcohol is legal. I can't drink it because a) I'm an alcoholic and b) I have hep C as well. What am I supposed to get high on then?


They should legalize(likely cheaper now) and tax pot. And prescriptions are good.
 
Astavats said:
Well for most people I know (excluding rich kids) those under 18 don't have credit cards, or debit cards, or anything such to order from online, and they need there parents to order stuff for them. It's a hindrance in the way of minors getting a hold of drugs. Is it still possible they still will? Of course.

I got my first debit card at 13, which was unique at the time but its becoming more and more common. As the internet becomes a more dominant force in our daily lives our reliance on credit and debit cards will only increase. And with kids these days growing up with the internet, debit cards will become quite normal.
 
^^^
i had a debit card when i was 14 or 15 and had just gotten a job. i used the card to order a bottle of dxm powder from some research chemical website.
i never used an online pharmacy when i was a minor, but it would definitely be easy access for kids.
 
Edit: No sources, even if they're long gone - n4k33n They sold EVERYTHING, 5-meo-DMT prior to scheduling , mushrooms by the pound, San Pedro cacti, morning glory's by the freaking TON, and a million other chemist type products. The 5Meo was one of the few straight rc's they had, but a lot of precursors.

Anyway, I think they take someone who has been made an example of and "add" to the story by turning an Ultram order into an OC order, you know what I mean? I used to hear about OxyContin being seized at the UPS hub by the Gov. of Kentucky I think , I know it was during the NROP days when TONS of hydrocodone was mailed out by filling out a questionare, a friend once wrote " I was kicked in the balls" for his "reason for needing requested medication", got 90 Norcos!! But Stumbo, the guy in KY doing all the cracking down on UPS shipments at the time, around 2004-2005 , was claiming it to be OC, I just don't believe it, there may be OC online but it is FAR and FEW between, Lortabs at the time were rampant.

I think the Methadone part may have been embellished.
 
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