Mr Ontario
13-01-2008, 01:15 PM
For those who don't know and still think these products are good or legit!
Operation "Gear Grinder" ..remember!?
By MARK SHERMAN
Thursday, December 15, 2005
AP
WASHINGTON -- A U.S. grand jury has indicted eight Mexican drug makers on charges they sold steroids to Americans via the Internet in what the Drug Enforcement Administration said Thursday was its largest operation against suppliers of the banned substances.
Indictments in U.S. District Court in San Diego include charges against the eight companies and 11 executives after a 21-month investigation, the
DEA said. The businesses sell $56 million worth of steroids to U.S. customers annually, the DEA said.
Alberto Saltiel-Cohen, described by the DEA as a Mexican citizen who owns three of the companies, was arrested in San Diego on Wednesday, the agency said.
Two people suspected of trafficking in steroids were arrested in San Diego and two others were picked up in Laredo, Texas, the DEA said.
Federal agents also have identified more than 2,000 people in the United States who bought steroids from the companies over the Internet. Importing anabolic steroids can be a felony.
"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," DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy said.
The DEA said 82 percent of the steroids it tests in its laboratories come from Mexico. The indicted companies account for more than half the Mexican supply, it said.
According to the DEA, the steroid manufacturers tried to mask their intent by marketing their products for use in animals. The companies set up Web sites and facilitated ordering via e-mail, the DEA said.
Saltiel-Cohen's companies, Quality Vet, Denkall and Animal Power, are significant U.S. suppliers of Nandrolone, the DEA said. Quality Vet's English-language Web site indicates its products are for veterinary use only.
The other companies and their products are:
- Laboratorios Tornel, Testosterone Decanoate.
- Laboratorios Brovel, Nandrolone Decanoate.
- Pet's Pharma, Testosterone Enanthate.
- Syd Group, Stanozolol.
- Loffler, Methandrostenolone.
Los Angeles Times
July 10, 2007
SAN DIEGO — Three Mexico-based companies that manufactured anabolic steroids pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance in the U.S. The three — Denkall, Quality Vet, and Animal Power — agreed to forfeit $1.4 million in profits.
The three used websites to attract customers in the U.S. Until late 2005, the three were the source of more than 75% of all Mexican steroids seized in the U.S., prosecutors said.
The businesses were indicted in December 2005 along with five other Mexican anabolic steroid manufacturers in what the Drug Enforcement Administration then called its largest operation against suppliers of the banned substances. According to the DEA, the steroid manufacturers tried to mask their intent by marketing their products for use in animals.
Messages left with defense attorneys were not immediately returned Monday
Operation "Gear Grinder" ..remember!?
By MARK SHERMAN
Thursday, December 15, 2005
AP
WASHINGTON -- A U.S. grand jury has indicted eight Mexican drug makers on charges they sold steroids to Americans via the Internet in what the Drug Enforcement Administration said Thursday was its largest operation against suppliers of the banned substances.
Indictments in U.S. District Court in San Diego include charges against the eight companies and 11 executives after a 21-month investigation, the
DEA said. The businesses sell $56 million worth of steroids to U.S. customers annually, the DEA said.
Alberto Saltiel-Cohen, described by the DEA as a Mexican citizen who owns three of the companies, was arrested in San Diego on Wednesday, the agency said.
Two people suspected of trafficking in steroids were arrested in San Diego and two others were picked up in Laredo, Texas, the DEA said.
Federal agents also have identified more than 2,000 people in the United States who bought steroids from the companies over the Internet. Importing anabolic steroids can be a felony.
"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," DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy said.
The DEA said 82 percent of the steroids it tests in its laboratories come from Mexico. The indicted companies account for more than half the Mexican supply, it said.
According to the DEA, the steroid manufacturers tried to mask their intent by marketing their products for use in animals. The companies set up Web sites and facilitated ordering via e-mail, the DEA said.
Saltiel-Cohen's companies, Quality Vet, Denkall and Animal Power, are significant U.S. suppliers of Nandrolone, the DEA said. Quality Vet's English-language Web site indicates its products are for veterinary use only.
The other companies and their products are:
- Laboratorios Tornel, Testosterone Decanoate.
- Laboratorios Brovel, Nandrolone Decanoate.
- Pet's Pharma, Testosterone Enanthate.
- Syd Group, Stanozolol.
- Loffler, Methandrostenolone.
Los Angeles Times
July 10, 2007
SAN DIEGO — Three Mexico-based companies that manufactured anabolic steroids pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance in the U.S. The three — Denkall, Quality Vet, and Animal Power — agreed to forfeit $1.4 million in profits.
The three used websites to attract customers in the U.S. Until late 2005, the three were the source of more than 75% of all Mexican steroids seized in the U.S., prosecutors said.
The businesses were indicted in December 2005 along with five other Mexican anabolic steroid manufacturers in what the Drug Enforcement Administration then called its largest operation against suppliers of the banned substances. According to the DEA, the steroid manufacturers tried to mask their intent by marketing their products for use in animals.
Messages left with defense attorneys were not immediately returned Monday