A San Fernando Valley man pleaded not guilty Tuesday to federal charges
alleging he used “darknet” marketplaces to sell hundreds of thousands of
dollars’ worth of fentanyl-laced pills and cocaine to buyers
nationwide.
The 22-year-old man from Van Nuys — whose alleged aliases
include “Malachai Johnson” and “SouthSideOxy” — and a 22-year-old
Burbank woman, were charged in an eight-count indictment filed last
month, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.
Both defendants are
charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute fentanyl and cocaine,
five counts of distribution of fentanyl and one count of distribution
of cocaine. The man also is charged with one count of possession of
firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, court papers show.
The
man has been in federal custody since his arrest on May 4. The female
defendant is expected to make her initial federal court appearance in
the coming weeks. A trial date of July 11 was scheduled in Los Angeles
federal court, but that date is expected to change.
According to the
indictment, from at least April 2021 until last month, the defendants
and others conspired to sell fentanyl and cocaine via darknet
marketplaces such as White House Market, ToRReZ and AlphaBay. The man,
using aliases, created vendor profiles on these marketplaces to sell
illegal drugs in exchange for cryptocurrency, the indictment alleges.
The
defendants allegedly monitored and maintained the vendor profiles,
including by updating drug listings and shipment options, tracking drug
orders received online, and offloading Monero cryptocurrency received as
drug deal payments into cryptocurrency wallets that the man controlled,
prosecutors said.
The man allegedly recruited and hired accomplices —
including the woman — to help with packaging and shipping the narcotics
that they sold on the darknet. The man directed his alleged female
accomplice and other co-conspirators on how to package and ship the
narcotics, and he assisted them in the packaging and shipping, the
indictment alleges.
The indictment contends that in May 2021, one
week after the man created a darknet vendor profile for the purpose of
selling illegal drugs, he texted the woman to tell her that their
darknet drug sales were doing well.
Later that month, the male
defendant allegedly texted a co-conspirator that he had just sold 20,000
pills to customers, according to court documents.
In June 2021, he
allegedly texted an accomplice that he had 34 drug orders he had to
fill. The following month, in text messages to the woman about the
conspiracy’s goals, the defendant stated, “I’m really tryna make like 5
mil,” according to the indictment.
The proceeds from the alleged drug
sales — after being converted from cryptocurrency into cash — allegedly
were stored by the defendants at their respective residences. They
shipped fentanyl and cocaine that were sold for hundreds of thousands of
dollars, according to the indictment.
The man also allegedly
possessed firearms, specifically two gold-plated handguns — one without a
serial number — to protect his drug-trafficking business and the
proceeds of drug sales made on darknet marketplaces, federal prosecutors
said.
If convicted of all charges, the man and woman would face
mandatory minimum sentences of 15 years and 10 years, respectively, in
federal prison. Each defendant also would face up to life in federal
prison, prosecutors noted.
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