A federal jury in Manhattan has convicted two men at the center of what prosecutors describe as a coast-to-coast counterfeit pill empire that turned Bronx and Washington Heights basements into clandestine “pill mills.” The operation pressed fentanyl-laced tablets to look like oxycodone and other prescription medications, shipped orders to buyers in all 50 states, and was tied to at least one fatal overdose, according to court filings. Large quantities of the fake pills were seized when law enforcement finally moved in.
After a six-week trial, jurors found Francisco Alberto Lopez Reyes and Edward Eustate Jimenez guilty on a raft of narcotics charges. Prosecutors said Lopez Reyes was convicted as a principal administrator of a continuing criminal enterprise, conspiracy to distribute narcotics resulting in death, narcotics distribution, and money laundering. Jimenez was convicted of conspiracy to distribute narcotics resulting in death and narcotics distribution. According to the government, Lopez Reyes called the shots from the Dominican Republic while lieutenants in New York mixed, dyed, and stamped tablets for shipment. Those convictions carry steep mandatory minimums, and the continuing-criminal-enterprise count alone can result in a life sentence, with several other counts carrying multi-decade minimums, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of New York.
Prosecutors told jurors that records and shipping lists showed the conspiracy sent more than one million pills to customers around the country, while officers seized roughly 650,000 additional tablets from mills and stash locations. A unanimous jury agreed the pair ran a massive, predatory scheme. The U.S. attorney summed it up starkly in a statement, warning, “A jury has now confirmed what New Yorkers know: if you deal in fentanyl, you deal in death.” The government’s case leaned on order logs, mailing records, and pill-press machinery tied to the defendants, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of New York.
How the Scheme Worked
From cramped basements in the Bronx and Washington Heights, workers for the organization mixed fentanyl, para-fluorofentanyl, and methamphetamine with binders and dyes, then pressed and imprinted the concoction to mimic legitimate prescription brands, prosecutors said. The fakes were advertised through slick, professionally designed websites and shipped in mail parcels to buyers nationwide. One 45-year-old U.S. Army veteran died after taking pills from a package that matched the counterfeit “M30” oxycodone tablets, and toxicology linked the death to fentanyl and a fentanyl analogue, as reported by the AP.
Multi-Agency Effort and Warnings
Prosecutors credited a broad task force that pulled in Homeland Security Investigations, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, DEA task forces, local police, and other federal partners for tracing shipments and locating the pill mills. The case is part of a wider federal push against bogus online pharmacies, which investigators say use persuasive web storefronts and ordinary mail services to reach tens of thousands of customers. The Drug Enforcement Administration warns that many internet pharmacies operate illegally and that pills bought from unverified sites can contain lethal doses of fentanyl, putting buyers at serious risk. The agency offers guidance on spotting and avoiding such operations through the DEA…