Earlier this month, the Chainalysis Public Key podcast featured a deeply informative interview about the fentanyl overdose epidemic in the United States. The discussion shed light on two critical aspects:
- The role of Chinese-manufactured precursor chemicals being shipped to the U.S., and
- The laundering of criminal proceeds through China-based money laundering exchanges.
At IP Probe Blog, we’ve been covering the fentanyl crisis since 2019—a crisis fueled in part by China’s precursor chemical manufacturing.
In my first blog post on this crisis, I cited a staggering 30,000 fentanyl-related deaths in the U.S. in 2018. The reported death toll in 2023 is 85,600—an alarming testament to how this epidemic continues to spiral out of control.
Mexican cartels and Chinese money laundering networks have forged a symbiotic relationship, enabling them to evade law enforcement detection.
The Public Key podcast underscores how these criminal operations intersect with technology and public safety. From cryptocurrency transactions to clandestine supply chains, the infrastructure supporting these illicit activities is as innovative as it is dangerous.
Here are excerpts from a March 2024 UPDATED Chainalysis report titled “Crypto and the Opioid Crisis: What Blockchain Analysis Reveals about Global Fentanyl Sales”:
“Due to recent law enforcement actions and sanctions, we know that many illicit actors involved in fentanyl-related transactions use cryptocurrency. To analyze these patterns at scale, Chainalysis identified cryptocurrency addresses associated with suspected China-based fentanyl precursor sellers.”
“Last year, we analyzed the role of cryptocurrency in global fentanyl sales by looking at the on-chain activity of crypto addresses associated with suspected China-based chemical precursor shops. We found that those addresses received more than $37.8 million worth of cryptocurrency between January 2018 and April 2023.”
I urge you to review the Chainalysis report, which provides more details and graphics to emphasize this alarming reality.
All Roads Lead to China
This Chinese criminal network reflects a broader, coordinated effort by China and its surrogates to destabilize American and Western societies.
Whether it’s:
- The massive counterfeiting of American and Western brands,
- Influence and infiltration campaigns targeting U.S. and Western government and private institutions,
- The repression of ethnic Chinese living legally in the U.S. and other Western nations,
- Intellectual property theft from our universities and corporations. or
- Poisoning our populations with fentanyl
China’s state-sponsored operations represent a calculated and holistic assault on U.S. and Western stability. This is not merely an attack on specific sectors but a systemic threat endangering every facet of our democratic societies.
Fiction Inspired by Fact: Bird in the Cage
In my new novel Bird in the Cage, I explore this nexus of China state sponsored crime and espionage through fiction.
One sub-plot follows a drug lab in Manhattan equipped with precursor mixing machines that is raided and seized by authorities.This leads to the discovery of ties to a Mexican cartel and a Chinese-based manufacturing executive—whose eventual capture requires extrajudicial measures due to a lack of cooperation from the Chinese government.
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