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DEA Announces Charges in Largest Ever Steroid Probe
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DEA Announces Charges in Largest Ever Steroid
Probe
'Operation Gear Grinder' Targeted Illegal Drugs Manufactured in Mexico
By JASON RYAN
WASHINGTON, Dec. 15, 2005 —
In what it describes as the largest steroid investigation in U.S. history, the Drug Enforcement Agency
announced six indictments, charging eight anabolic steroid manufacturers in Mexico and 23 individuals
with federal drug trafficking and money laundering.
DEA officials are optimistic the two-year investigation -- dubbed "Operation Gear Grinder" -- will reduce
the availability of steroids available in the United States.
"This international operation will greatly diminish the supply of anabolic steroids produced in Mexico that
are being sold illegally in the United States," John Fernandes, special agent in charge of the DEA San
Diego Field Division, said today.
According to DEA laboratory analysis, 82 percent of all steroids seized and analyzed in the United States
are manufactured in Mexico. The DEA believes that a vast majority of the steroids in the United States are
manufactured by the eight companies charged today.
The DEA believes the eight companies had combined sales of $56 million per year in the United States.
According to court documents, many of the firms operated and supplied veterinary stores along the
U.S.-Mexico border. DEA investigators believe some of the firms and distributors smuggled large
quantities of steroids across the border for distribution in the United States.
Marketed for Animals, But Allegedly Meant for Humans
Court papers show the DEA used confidential sources who purchased large quantities of steroids from one
of the firms allegedly involved and that the source purchased a $10,000 shipment of steroids on Sept. 19,
2005.
The firms have been operating openly in Mexico and marketed their products on the Internet as animal
steroids for horses and cattle, but DEA officials say they were designed for human consumption since pill
or injection doses are not typically usually used for veterinarian purposes.
"Veterinarians wouldn't be using these doses," DEA special agent Doug Coleman told ABC News.
Dr. Alberto Saltiel Cohen, a Mexican veterinarian, was arrested at a hotel in Southern California where he
believed he was picking up money from contacts who were actually DEA special agents.
Four other individuals were also arrested in San Diego and Laredo, Texas, and charged with steroid
trafficking. Other defendants remain in Mexico. Their custody status is currently unknown, but U.S. law
enforcement authorities are working with the Mexican Federal Agency of Investigation.
Investigators have identified over 2,000 people who ordered the illegal steroids from the Mexican
DEA Announces Charges in Largest Ever Steroid Probe
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companies. Field agents are currently trying to run down leads in the case and determine who may have
been distributing the steroids. Although purchasing anabolic steroids is a federal crime, DEA officials are
more focused on tracking down the U.S. dealers and distributors selling the illegal products.
A Dangerous Internet Boom
DEA Special Agent Doug Coleman said that the use of the Internet allowed U.S.-based distributors and
customers to request the anabolic steroids in certain dose levels -- in effect, "getting their steroids tailor
made," Coleman said.
Illegal drug trafficking on the Internet has increased in recent years and has resulted in the DEA launching
numerous investigations into Web-based pharmacies, many of them operating outside the United States.
Used mostly by body builders and other athletes for increased muscle and strength, steroid use has
increased in recent years according to the DEA.
"Drug traffickers prey on the belief that steroids enhance ability, but steroids only rob that ability, as we
have seen so often from the affected lives of too many youth and professional athletes," said DEA
Administrator Karen Tandy in a statement today.
The ability to order prescription drugs online has also resulted in more teenagers obtaining and using
steroids.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse estimates that more than 500,000 8th to 10th grade students are
currently using steroids, and an increasing number of these students do not believe that they are harmful.
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