if cops are here.....I DO DRUGS HAHAHAHAA yeah come find me see if i care just had to add that... ~peace~
Yes I'm sure along with you there are loads of people who love hairy hippie ass cheeks lol, that's why I responded with ... haha
Anyone who says there aren't pigs watching (and most likely posting on) this and other drug culture forums is either ignorant or a pig themselves.
lots of feds got nothing to do but sit on theyr ass and monitor many websites you bet your cojones this is 1 they watch of course they keep they mouse shut . dont you think that would be wise . make everything look nice ,quiet and dandy .
International Internet Drug Ring Shattered [size=-1]E-Traffickers Arrested: Indian/Costa Rican/Canadian Cyber Criminal Alliances Shut Down[/size] [size=-2]DEA Administrator Karen Tandy announces results of Operation "Cyber Chase."[/size] [size=-2]DEA agents make arrest in New York portion of Operation "Cyber Chase."[/size] [size=-1]Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Karen P. Tandy today announced the results of Operation “Cyber Chase”, a year-long Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation that targeted international Internet pharmaceutical traffickers operating in the United States, India, Asia, Europe and the Caribbean. These e-traffickers distributed drugs world-wide using “rogue” Internet pharmacies. [/size] [size=-1]Over the past 48 hours there were 20 arrests in eight U.S. cities and four foreign countries. Domestically arrests occurred in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Ft. Lauderdale and Sarasota, Florida; Abilene and Tyler, Texas; New York, NY; Greenville, SC; and Rochester, New York. Internationally arrests occurred in San Jose, Costa Rica; New Delhi, Agra, and Bombay, India. [/size] [size=-1]DEA Administrator Tandy; Scott Burns Deputy Director for State and Local Affairs, White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP); Brian Lampkin, Section Chief, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Financial Crimes Section; Deputy Assistant Director of Investigations of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Paul Kilcoyne; Associate Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs, Food and Drug Administration, John M. Taylor; Paul J. Trimbur, Inspector in Charge, Mail Theft, Violent Crimes and Narcotics Investigations, U.S. Postal Inspections Service (USPIS); and Commissioner Mark W. Everson, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) made the announcement today. [/size] [size=-1]DEA, FBI, ICE, FDA, USPIS, IRS, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania Patrick L. Meehan; United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Roslynn R. Mauskopf; state and local law enforcement; and law enforcement authorities in four foreign countries participated in this investigation.[/size] [size=-1]Operation “Cyber Chase” targeted major pharmaceutical drug traffickers who allegedly shipped Schedule II-V pharmaceutical controlled substances including narcotics, amphetamines, and anabolic steroids directly to buyers of all ages without the medical examination by a physician required by U.S. law. [/size] [size=-1][/size] [size=-1][/size] [size=-1]These e-traffickers used more than 200 websites to illicitly distribute pharmaceutical controlled substances. Cyber Chase is part of DEA’s “On-Line Pharmacy Investigation Strategy” spearheaded by DEA’s Special Operations Division (SOD). SOD is a joint law enforcement program which is comprised of agents and analysts from the DEA, FBI, IRS and ICE, as well as attorneys from the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division.[/size] [size=-1]DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy said, “For too long the Internet has been an open medicine cabinet with cyber drug dealers illegally doling out a vast array of narcotics, amphetamines, and steroids. In this first major international enforcement action against online rogue pharmacies and their sources of supply, we’ve logged these traffickers off the Internet.”[/size] [size=-1]Operation Cyber Chase began after the DEA Philadelphia Division identified a Philadelphia-based international Internet drug trafficking organization, allegedly headed by Indian nationals Brij Bhusan Bansal and Akhil Bansal. The Bansal Organization allegedly repackaged controlled substances smuggled into the United States from India and other countries and distributed them throughout the U.S. and the world. [/size] [size=-1]John Walters, Director of National Drug Control Policy said, "Prescription drugs help millions of Americans every day. But their misuse is becoming a serious problem, abetted by drug traffickers who are using the Internet to attempt to subvert our medical prescription system. E-traffickers that target young people and those suffering from the disease of addiction are now the target of law enforcement action, while we continue to ensure proper access to needed medications. I would like to thank and applaud the agencies and offices involved in this investigation as their efforts truly make America safer."[/size] [size=-1]Since July 2003, the Bansal Organization distributed approximately 2.5 million dosage units of Schedule II-V pharmaceutical controlled substances including Vicodin (hydrocodone), anabolic steroids, and amphetamines per month. [/size] [size=-1]“The FBI remains committed to investigating the illegal sale of pharmaceuticals over the Internet. The FBI’s Internet Pharmaceutical Fraud Initiative is working with the Drug Enforcement Administration, and other federal, state, local and international law enforcement partners to combat this crime and dismantle the responsible criminal enterprises,” said FBI Director Robert Mueller. “Illegal pharmaceuticals pose a great risk to the health and welfare of the American public. These drugs are being manufactured overseas in unregulated facilities, smuggled into the United States in an uncontrolled environment, and distributed without oversight of a licensed physician or pharmacist.”[/size] [size=-1]"This investigation dismantled a major source of illicit pharmaceuticals that posed a significant public health threat. Closing down these illegal, Internet drug pipelines is essential to protecting consumers of pharmaceuticals," said Michael J. Garcia, Assistant Secretary, Immigration and Customs Enforcement.[/size] [size=-1]"Operation Cyber Chase sends an instant message to ‘cybercriminals’ that the Internet is not their safehouse. Criminals, disguised as entrepreneurs, use the Internet to invade your home and push their poison. Whether the battle is on the street or on the Web, the outcome remains the same: Postal Inspectors will continue working with our law enforcement partners to bring offenders to justice," said Chief Postal Inspector Lee R. Heath. [/size] [size=-1]"Consumers ordering prescription drugs from a website they're not familiar with put themselves in a ‘buyer beware’ situation," said John Taylor, Associate Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs, Food and Drug Administration. “The medications may be coming from unknown sources, may not be stored or labeled properly, and may not meet quality assurance standards designed to produce safe and effective products. Many of the safeguards that exist for brick and mortar pharmacies do not exist for Internet Pharmacies and the potential for harmful drug interactions is magnified." [/size] [size=-1]“The combined efforts of law enforcement agencies in an investigation of this magnitude produce a formidable force against narcotics trafficking and money laundering. Individuals and businesses utilizing the Internet to sell pharmaceuticals are bound by the same laws and regulations that apply to the corner drug store,” said Nancy Jardini, Chief, IRS Criminal Investigation. “The link between where the money comes from, who gets it, when it is received, and where it is stored or deposited, can provide evidence that a crime was committed. Finding and connecting those links is what IRS brings to this cooperative effort.”[/size] [size=-1]In early April, the Grand Jury in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and in the Eastern District of New York issued indictments charging the following: 21 U.S.C. § 841 Illegal Distribution of Controlled Substances, 21 U.S.C. § 846 Conspiracy to Distribute Controlled Substances, 21 U.S.C. § 848 Continuing Criminal Enterprise, 21 U.S.C. § 963 Conspiracy to Import Controlled Substances, 21 U.S.C. § 331(a) Introduction of Misbranded Drugs into Interstate Commerce, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h) Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1) Promotional Money Laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2) International Money Laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1957 Transactional Money Laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 982 Criminal Forfeiture, 21 U.S.C. § 853 Criminal Forfeiture, 21 U.S.C. § 970 Criminal Forfeiture and 18 U.S.C. § 2 Aiding and Abetting[/size] [size=-1]This indictment also seeks forfeiture of 41 bank accounts, 26 in the U.S. and the remaining in Cyprus, India, Singapore, the Channel Islands, Isle of Man, West Indies, Antigua, and Ireland. Illegal financial transactions listed in the ind [/size]
Wow, they did it again! Fortunately (after checking the geographical info), none of my sources seem to be among the victims of this latest chapter of governmental arbitrariness. I´m usually more the calm type of person, but now I´m really starting to get angry!
buy several assault rifles even if they are the semi auto version only.and lots of ammo we can win this one.
Yep! Herewith, I formally declare (my personal) war against the DEA (and related organizations with similar goals on behalf of drugs)! Fear my rage!
If you really want to change things, words, not guns are the answer. The last two generations have been scared into silence, so once again, ignorance is the norm regarding drugs. Teach your parents! Teach your children! Try to reach anyone you can so that fewer people will blindly support the anti-drug bullshit. They will always have more guns, but eventually, information can subvert even the tightest propaganda machine. Jim PS: Always assume that you are being recorded. Be aware of conspiricy laws! Speach is not free in this country, that is just another bullshit line! It is better to just keep so clean that you can openly speak out and try to change things! As a synthetic chemist, and a university level teacher who advocates drug legalization, i assume that i am often watched, but i do not hide my identity, or allow myself to be scared into silence. I thorouly pissed off a federal judge with a letter i wrote in defense of a grower friend of mine. I just keep it clean and speak my mind. If someone wants to bust my house, then they will have to completely fabricate any evidence to get anything on me more than simple herb possesion, which in this state is $100 fine. Freedom comes from knowledge not guns! Jim
Lets get this right we simply had a nice talk with the british in 1775 and told them they must leave no guns were ever used or involve.
in other states you loose your car,house,your job , all nice and dandy. oh and you stay in prison while the state gives the house to a low income family or oction it off.
And you think guns are going to achieve what....... Choose your battles wisely "He who fights and runs away, lives to fight another day" Bob Marley
I just had the fantasy of a virus, which affects only DEA-computers and makes the PC show nice and colourful acid-like patterns...
LOL, thats not a Marley quote..........................lololololololol "Dont shoot til you see the whites of thier eyes"------John Lennon