Justice Department announces 150 arrests in international darknet drug operation

·1 min read
US Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco speaks about Operation Dark HunTor
Deputy Atty. Gen. Lisa Monaco, with Europol Deputy Executive Director Jean-Phillipe-Lecouffe, speaks Tuesday about Operation Dark HunTor, a joint criminal opioid and darknet enforcement operation, during a press conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images)

Justice Department officials announced on Tuesday the arrests of 150 people and the seizure of more than $30 million in an international investigation targeting drug trafficking on the darknet.

Operation Dark HunTor led to 65 arrests in the United States, one in Bulgaria, three in France, 47 in Germany, four in the Netherlands, 24 in the United Kingdom, four in Italy and two in Switzerland, officials said. A number of investigations are still ongoing.

In addition to seizing $31 million in cash and digital currency, investigators also seized 45 handguns, Justice Department officials said.

Deputy Atty. Gen. Lisa Monaco told reporters the investigators focused particular attention on darknet vendors who were minting counterfeit pills that contained potentially fatal doses of fentanyl, methamphetamines and other illegal drugs.

The operation “prevented countless lives from being lost to this dangerous trade in illicit and counterfeit drugs because one pill can kill," Monaco said.

Many of the counterfeit pills were made to look like common prescription drugs, said Anne Milgram, the administrator for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

"We cannot stress enough the danger of these substances," Milgram said. "These are the drugs that are driving the overdose crisis in America."

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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