The FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) on Thursday announced that 270 people were arrested and that hundreds of pounds of fentanyl were seized as part of an operation targeting drug traffickers on darknet websites.
An operation targeting an apartment in Los Angeles that was being used as a hub to distribute cocaine and methamphetamine on the dark web also led to the seizure of “large amounts of cash and suspected drugs,” the FBI said.
Four people who were arrested in the case are accused of operating around 10 dark web vendors on 17 different markets, it said, adding that they primarily sold meth, cocaine, MDMA, and ketamine in exchange for cryptocurrency. They also allegedly shipped drug-containing packages through the U.S. Postal Service, according to the FBI statement.
Aside from the arrests and seizures, U.S. officials noted that they placed sanctions on Iranian national Behrouz Parsarad for his alleged role as founder and operator of the Nemesis Market, which operates on the dark web. He was also indicted by a federal grand jury on drug trafficking charges related to that operation, the DOJ said.
“Nemesis Market, through the darknet, was a borderless powerhouse of criminal activity that not only fueled the drug epidemic, but also a multitude of illegal acts with the capacity to harm our citizens and destroy our communities,” FBI Cleveland Acting Special Agent in Charge Charles Johnston said in a statement in April.
The announcements come just two years after officials in the United States and Europe arrested nearly 300 people, confiscated more than $53 million, and seized a dark-web marketplace known as the “Monopoly Market” in a separate case. A year before that, German and U.S. authorities took down the “Hydra” dark-web market.