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News
Release
July 26, 2004
Accused
Belizean Drug Trafficker Tied to Colombian Terrorist Group Extradited
on Cocaine Charges and Threats to U.S. Agents
JUL
26 -- KAREN P. TANDY, Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, ANTHONY PLACIDO, the Special Agent in Charge of the
United States
Drug Enforcement Administration in New York, and DAVID N. KELLEY,
the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York,
announced the arrests of three individuals Wednesday pursuant to
warrants from the Southern District of New York in a nationwide crackdown
on Internet merchants of designer drugs. A total of ten defendants
across the country were arrested Wednesday as part of the DEA’s “Operation
Web Tryp.” The three defendants arrested pursuant to the Southern
District of New York’s criminal complaint were: APRIL CURTIS,
45,arrested at her home in Carefree, Arizona; DOUG THOMPSON, 32,
arrested outside his home in Valdosta, Georgia; and RAYMOND DUNCAN,22,
arrested in Southern California. These three defendants were charged
in a criminal complaint with conspiring with each other and others
to violate the narcotics laws of the United States.
Ms.
TANDY stated: “Drug pushers who use the
Internet should have great concern because they will find
themselves out of business and behind bars.” According to the Complaint, the defendants operated
Internet businesses that distributed designer drugs under the guise
of “research
chemicals.” From at least in or about May 2002 through the present, CURTIS
operated an Internet website (the “RAC Research Website”) from
which she sold chemical substances substantially similar in chemical composition
and
effect on the central nervous system to tryptamine-based controlled substances.
The Complaint alleges that the RAC Research website offered the
following four controlled-substance analogues for sale: (a)
methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT); (b) 5-methoxy-alphamethyltryptamine
hydrochloride (5-MeO-AMT); (c) 5-methoxy-N,N-diisopropyltryptamine (5-MeO-DiPT);
and (d) 4-acetoxy-N,N-Diisopropyltryptamine
(4-AcO-DiPT). DOUG THOMPSON participated in the business of the RAC Research
Website by shipping orders to customers
across the country.
According
to the Complaint, from in or about May 2002 through in or about September
2003, the RAC Research Website collected a total of approximately
$567,765 in revenue. Until recently, CURTIS conducted business affairs
relating to the RAC Research Website from her home in the Bronx,
New York.
The
Complaint alleges that numerous e-mails between CURTIS and THOMPSON
detailed their efforts to use the RAC Research Website to distribute
designer drugs for human consumption. For example, the Complaint
alleges that THOMPSON sent CURTIS an e-mail on or about September
8, 2003, in
which he stated that “I joined a tryptamine discussion group on
Yahoo. I joined under a different name and will try to drum up some business
for us in the chat rooms.” According to the Complaint, CURTIS responded
to THOMPSON’s message later that same day by stating, among other
things, “That’s great about the tryptamine group, that’s
how I learned what new compounds to get so keep your ears open as to
what people want.”
The
Complaint sets forth additional evidence of CURTIS
and THOMPSON’s use of the RAC Research Website to distribute
controlled substance analogues for human consumption. CURTIS
allegedly corresponded with some of her customers about their ingestion
of controlled substance analogues purchased on the RAC Research
Website. According to the Complaint, on or about October 12,
2003, a Canadian
customer told CURTIS in an e-mail: “5-MeO DMT was the first thing
i tried from RAC. i had a number of good experiences, particularly when
i would STACK the dosages. a couple of +++ experiences i guess. but no
++++’s! hee hee. i have a suspicion that the 5-MeO in our
brains is released if we are near-death.
maybe part of dreaming, too, perhaps.” CURTIS responded on
or about that same day: “Glad that you had a great night last night
but what kind of enlightenment did you have? You have picqued my curiosity.”
Finally,
the Complaint details two occasions on which CURTIS sold controlled
substance analogues to undercover DEA agents.
In the
second sale, on
or about February 3, 2004, CURTIS volunteered to deliver the
chemicals directly to the undercover DEA agent in Manhattan
because she said
that she enjoyed driving her BMW from the Bronx. At that meeting,
the undercover
officer told CURTIS that his friends loved “this stuff” in
the clubs and couldn’t get enough. CURTIS suggested that the undercover
officer try another controlled substance analogue that was a huge seller
in Europe and loved in the clubs.
The Complaint alleges
further that CURTIS supplied designer drugs to customers of RAYMOND
DUNCAN’s Internet
website (the “Duncan Lab Website”). According to the Complaint,
DUNCAN operated the Duncan Lab Website from at least in or about January
2003 through in or about early July 2004. Like the RAC Research Website,
the Duncan Lab
Website purported to sell chemical substances for scientific research.
The Complaint alleges
that e-mails between CURTIS and DUNCAN demonstrate their efforts to
distribute designer drugs to customers. For instance,
on or about
April 18, 2003, DUNCAN wrote to CURTIS: ”April, I have received an order
for a half gram of MeO-AMT. Please send it to: [Ohio customer’s name,
address, and phone number provided by DUNCAN.] Thanks, I will update our tab
with the new information and send it to you. Ray.” In another example,
CURTIS wrote to DUNCAN on or about October 3, 2003: “I
have [a controlled substance analogue] now and can get anything we need or
want. . . . [L]et’s make some money together. The more you make the more
I make.” If convicted of these charges, each defendant will be subject to a maximum
penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment, a maximum fine of the greatest of
$1,000,000 or twice the gross gain/loss resulting from the offenses, and
a maximum term of lifetime supervised release.
APRIL CURTIS appeared
yesterday before United States Magistrate Judge LAWRENCE O. ANDERSON
in federal court in Phoenix, Arizona. DOUG THOMPSON appeared
Wednesday before United States Magistrate Judge RICHARD L. HODGE in federal
court in
Albany, Georgia. He made bail yesterday in Valdosta, Georgia. RAYMOND DUNCAN
appeared Wednesday before United States Magistrate Judge STEPHEN G. LARSON
in federal court in Riverside, California. He was detained without bail.
All three defendants are due to appear before a magistrate judge in federal
court
in Manhattan in the coming weeks.
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