In a significant crackdown on international drug trafficking and money laundering, a grand jury in Dayton has brought charges against a group that includes three Americans, 22 Chinese nationals, and four Chinese pharmaceutical companies. The indictment revolves around narcotics and money laundering conspiracies involving illegal cutting agents meant to enhance the lethality of fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid, as reported by the U.S. Department of Justice.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi emphasized the gravity of the situation, stating, “Protecting Americans from fentanyl is one of this Department’s most important missions — and it starts with dismantling the international pipelines that bring deadly drugs and precursor to our shores,” according to a U.S. Department of Justice statement. She added, “We will not rest until we stop Chinese companies from shipping poison to our citizens and bring everyone involved in this lethal trade to swift, complete justice.”
One of the accused, Eric Michael Payne from Tipp City, Ohio, is believed to have been a primary supplier of these illegal cutting agents to fentanyl traffickers in southern Ohio. Investigations have uncovered his dealings with multiple Chinese entities that masqueraded as legitimate chemical companies or online pharmacies which knowingly brokered controlled substances for use in fentanyl production targeted at American streets. The substances, some of which are animal tranquilizers with potency up to 200 times greater than morphine, could yield over 150 kilograms of fentanyl mixtures destined for distribution, the federal indictment alleges…