[Note: Over 29k overdoses from the drug in 2017 most are street fent, counterfeit and mixed into drugs like heroin] Prince died from street fentanyl, he took the drug thinking it was Percocet as it looked identical to pharmacy grade Percocet from Watson, even the stamp]
Major dark web drug
suppliers have started to voluntarily ban the synthetic opioid fentanyl because
it is too dangerous, the National Crime Agency has said.
They are “delisting”
the high-strength painkiller, effectively classifying it alongside
mass-casualty firearms and explosives as commodities that are considered too
high-risk to trade. Fentanyl can be up to 100 times stronger than heroin and
can easily cause accidental overdoses, particularly when mixed with heroin.
Vince O’Brien, one of
the NCA’s leads on drugs, told the Observer that dark web marketplace operators
appeared to have made a commercial decision, because selling a drug that could
lead to fatalities was more likely to prompt attention from police.
It is the first known
instance of these types of operators moving to effectively ban a drug.
O’Brien said: “If
they’ve got people selling very high-risk commodities then it’s going to
increase the risk to them. There are marketplaces that will not accept listings
for weapons and explosives – those are the ones that will not accept listings
for fentanyl. Clearly, law enforcement would prioritise the supply of weapons,
explosives and fentanyl over, for example, class C drugs – and that might well
be why they do this.
“There are also drug
users on the dark web who say on forums that they don’t think it’s right that
people are selling fentanyl because it is dangerous and kills a lot of people.”
Fentanyl arrived in the
UK around 18 months ago and so far is said to have caused around 160 deaths,
with fatalities caused by the opioid rising by nearly 30% last year, according
to the Office for National Statistics.
One type of fentanyl,
carfentanyl, is thousands of times stronger than heroin and O’Brien confirmed
that police had made a number of small seizures of the substance in the UK. In
the US, fentanyl has taken a significantly more profound hold on the drugs
sector and has replaced heroin in many major US drug markets, precipitating a
more deadly phase of the nation’s opioid epidemic. The number of overdose
deaths associated with fentanyl and similar drugs has grown to more than 29,000
a year, from 3,000 five years ago. Deaths were up by more than 45% in 2017.
O’Brien said that the
NCA is working with US law enforcement agencies to prevent the UK from having a
similar fentanyl epidemic, though the number of people dependent on opioids in
the UK compared to America means it has a much smaller market.
“We are working closely
with international partners in terms of how the threat developed there. It’s an
emerging new drug, a threat we’re taken very seriously because of what happened
in the US,” said O’Brien. The NCA has had a series of successes against UK
fentanyl dealers, who typically source the drug from China and then sell it on
the dark web. The first fentanyl case to be sentenced in the UK involved Kyle
Enos, 25, from Newport who was jailed for eight years in February. Enos had
procured the narcotic from China, selling it worldwide and to customers in 30
UK police areas.
Colin Williams, senior
NCA investigating officer on the case, said: “We realised within a number of
hours we had to deal with this very quickly.”
Even so, as they
tracked down the 160 or so clients who had bought fentanyl from Enos to warn
them that the drug was deadly, they learned that four of his customers were
already dead. “We can’t say whether they took the drug but they were certainly
on his [customer] list,” said Williams.
Enos, himself a
fentanyl and heroin user, was aware of the risks and had informed each customer
that the substance was liable to kill.
O’Brien added: “Every
time we take down a dark web vendor we follow up with customers, and when we
have done that, a number are turning up dead – there’s a real cautionary tale
there.”
Some of the biggest
dark web fentanyl suppliers were closed down last year with the most famous –
Alphabay – often described as the largest underground market ever seen - shut
following a global police investigation.
What black markets still exist on TOR?
ReplyDeleteAlot of them still exist they dont get taken down much anymore
DeleteDream Market
DeleteMost of them. Old one goes down new one gets created
DeleteOK they can't sell fentynal on the dark web but anything else like coke or heroin even though they may contain fentynal but hey I guess it's a start.
ReplyDeleteCould be this month of December is all up in their feelings. Lol. - Sol Prendido
DeleteFinally a sense of rational to keep their customers coming back for more.
DeleteThe dead can't pay.
The sad part is that people ask for Fent now. They wanna kill themselves obviously.
ReplyDeleteYou could get it, or any other drug, via Craigslist openly albeit through the dealers "coded" ads.
ReplyDeleteDream market is major one
ReplyDeleteTrump and Xi deal. North Korea is going to fill that gap and NK biggest supplier of amphetamine
ReplyDeleteHonestly i got my best dope from Pirate Robert's Silk Road back in the day. Super safe, no crackhead middlemen, no hitting the streets, it gets in the mail, etc. The safest and sanest way to sell drugs in a rational world thay wouldn't be infested by prohibitionism and organize crime psychos.
ReplyDeleteLike it will stop the Chinese from selling any precursor to make it in Mexico...like what's actually going down?....but as long as the ups direct from China shipments...that and the difficulty placed on chronic pain patients to get a vicoden prescription , everything solved!!!!..... idiots.
ReplyDelete