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Wednesday, May 31, 2023

US Sanctions Chinese & Mexican Pill Press Suppliers Tied to Sinaloa Cartel

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned 17 individuals and entities involved in the international proliferation of equipment used to produce illicit drugs. These targets, seven entities and six individuals based in China and one entity and three individuals based in Mexico are directly or indirectly involved in the sale of pill press machines, die molds, and other equipment used to impress counterfeit trade markings of legitimate pharmaceuticals onto illicitly produced pills, often laced with fentanyl, frequently destined for U.S. markets.

“Treasury’s sanctions target every stage of the deadly supply chain fueling the surge in fentanyl poisonings and deaths across the country,” said Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson. “Counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl constitute a leading cause of these deaths, devastating thousands of American families each year. We remain committed to using all authorities against enablers of illicit drug production to disrupt this deadly global production and counter the threat posed by these drugs.”


Illicit & Counterfeit Pill Manufacturing

A pill press is also called a tablet press or a tableting machine. is a mechanical device that compresses powdered substances into tablets of uniform size and weight. The U.S. government regulates pill press machine importation. These machines vary in size and capacity, each of which can produce thousands of pills daily. The lack of controls and safeguards in illicit pill production often results in inconsistent and lethal dosages.

Illicit drugs in pill form, including those laced with fentanyl, may be blank or bear custom impressions. They may also be counterfeits of scheduled drugs, bearing trademarked wordmarks without authorization, such as “M30” for schedule II oxycodone products or “Xanax” for schedule IV alprazolam products.



Manufacturing illicit drugs in pill form requires a pill press machine, a controlled substance, and die molds. If the impressions on a die and on the pills it punches mimic trademarked pharmaceuticals, the die, and impressed pills are counterfeit.

Facilitation of equipment importation by bad actors is sometimes attempted in a manner designed to evade law enforcement scrutiny, which can include the mislabeling of shipments, the use of circuitous shipment routes, and the shipment of equipment parts in a piecemeal fashion.

Chinese Based Sanctions

OFAC designated Chinese pill press supplier Youli Technology Development Co., Ltd. (尤里科技发展有限公司) (Youli) along with three Youli-affiliated Chinese nationals, Guo Chunyan (郭春艳), Guo Yunnian (郭运年), and Guo Ruiguang (郭瑞光), all located in Huizhou, China. Youli has shipped pill press machinery to individuals in the United States involved in manufacturing counterfeit pills. Youli ships the machinery using techniques intended to evade law enforcement scrutiny. In addition, Youli has shipped scheduled pharmaceuticals to the United States for counterfeit pill manufacturing. Guo Chunyan and Guo Yunnian have supplied pill presses and dies to drug traffickers operating in the United States, including those involved with fentanyl-laced pills production.

OFAC designated Youli, Guo Chunyan, and Guo Yunnian pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14059 for having engaged in, or attempted to engage in, activities or transactions that have materially contributed to, or pose a significant risk of materially contributing to, the international proliferation of illicit drugs or their means of production. OFAC designated Guo Ruiguang pursuant to E.O. 14059 for having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, Youli.

OFAC also designated Shenzhen, China-located Yason General Machinery Co., Ltd. (亚新通用机械有限公司) (Yason), Hong Kong-registered but Shenzhen, China-based Yason Electronics Technology Co., Limited (亞新電子科技有限公司) (Yason Electronics), and Nanchang, China-located Shenzhen Yason General Machinery Co., Ltd. Nanchang Branch (深圳市亚新通⽤机械有限公司南昌分公司) (Yason Nanchang), interrelated Chinese companies implicated in the supply of press equipment internationally. OFAC additionally designated Yason and Yason Electronics company official Fei Yiren (费亿人) (Fei), a Chinese national.

Yason sells pill press-related equipment and has worked with a Mexico-based pill equipment supplier and contact who previously provided equipment to a Sinaloa Cartel-linked individual. This individual used the machines to create superlabs in Mexico with the capacity to produce millions of fentanyl-laced pills weekly. In 2017, Yason Electronics sent a pill press machine — in multiple packages and via the United States — to the contact in Mexico, the intended buyer of the equipment.


Lastly, OFAC designated online business Tdpmolds, an entity established and controlled by Zhao Dongdong (赵冬冬) (Zhao), a Chinese national located in Yantai, China. In addition to Tdpmolds, OFAC designated Chinese nationals and entities Zhao, Pan Hao (潘昊) (Pan), Yantai Yixun International Trade Co., Ltd. (烟台易迅国际贸易有限公司) (Yantai Yixun), and Yantai Mei Xun Trade Co., Ltd. (烟台美讯商贸有限公司) (Yantai Mei Xun).

Tdpmolds offers a range of pill press machines and dies for sale, and as recently as 2020, Tdpmolds shipped to the United States several pill press die molds, including ones used to produce counterfeit schedule II oxycodone and amphetamine pill products. As of 2019, “Xanax” dies used in support of U.S.-based pill press operations and sourced from Tdpmolds were seized by U.S. authorities. In that same year, Tdpmolds was also the source of other dies, including a counterfeit “M30” die, also used in U.S.-based criminal pill press operations. In 2019 and 2020, Zhao sold pill presses and die sets to individuals in the United States who used the equipment to produce pills with scheduled substances, including counterfeit pills marked with “M30” and “Xanax.” In 2019 and 2020, Pan facilitated the sale from Tdpmolds to the United States of dies used to manufacture counterfeit pills. As of 2019, Yantai Yixun was the source of equipment used by a U.S.-based drug trafficker involved with an illicit pill manufacturing business using dies to counterfeit scheduled drugs.

OFAC designated these companies and individuals pursuant to E.O. 14059 for having engaged in or attempted to engage in, activities or transactions that have materially contributed to, or pose a significant risk of materially contributing to, the international proliferation of illicit drugs or their means of production.

Mexican Based Sanctions

The designations also include Mexpacking Solutions (Mexpacking), a Chihuahua, Mexico-based business that sells pill presses and other equipment and is controlled by a Sinaloa Cartel pill press supplier. The business has been used as cover for an individual involved with making fentanyl-laced pills and with assisting Mexico-based cartel members with pill press operations. Goods from Mexpacking were shipped to another pill press equipment supplier involved with coordinating shipments of pill press machines and parts to drug trafficking organizations, including the Sinaloa Cartel.

Along with Mexpacking, OFAC designated three related individuals, all Mexican nationals: Mario Ernesto Martinez Trevizo (Martinez), Cinthia Adriana Rodriguez Almeida (Rodriguez), and Ernesto Alonso Macias Trevizo (Macias). Martinez, a sales representative with Mexpacking, as of late 2022, was responsible for managing a pill press supply network in Mexico, the head of which supplied pill press equipment the Sinaloa Cartel used. 


In this role, Martinez maintained business communications with China-based supplier Yason Electronics, which between 2019 and 2022 provided the network with numerous pill press machines and “M30” die molds. Rodriguez, as of late 2022, had a senior role in the pill press equipment supply network, which likewise necessitates coordination with Chinese supplier Yason Electronics. Between 2015 and 2021 Rodriguez also assisted with illicit drug production, including illicit drugs in pill form. Macias is a sales associate for Mexpacking.

As a result of today’s action, all property and interests in the property of the designated persons described above that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons are blocked and must be reported to OFAC. In addition, any entities that are owned, directly or indirectly, individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or more blocked persons are also blocked. Unless authorized by a general or specific license issued by OFAC, or exempt, OFAC’s regulations generally prohibit all transactions by U.S. persons or within (or transiting) the United States that involve any property or interests in property of designated or otherwise blocked persons. U.S. persons may face civil or criminal penalties for violations of E.O. 14059.

Source OFAC

31 comments:

  1. But but but China, in an open letter to ALMO, Chenn Xzo said no precursor chemicals to make Fentynal are shipped.

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    Replies
    1. But but but the U.S says it doesn’t support terrorist organizations or coups around the world 🤡

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    2. 2:17 What is Biden doing to stop this other than blaming others?

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    3. It's so easy to blame biden, typical brain washed trumper.🤣

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  2. Heavy fighting reported last night in teocaltiche jalos.. gonzalez brothers CdS contra el jardinero y las 4 .. 7 dead and several CDS trucks found burnt this morning along the 80 highway

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    1. Shit is getting heated in teocal, i wonder how long the Gonzales dude is gonna hold on, only a miracle like CJNG splitting in half would save him

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    2. @3:15p.m cjng ran and left there trucks and monstros and and torched them

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    3. This foo got it wrong those were all cjng trucks they left behind

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    4. Wow fangirls fighting over who trucks got burnt

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    5. @4:54 nobody is fighting. If you are giving details about something one should give out the right details

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    6. 4:54 Word! 🤣🤣🤣 mientras se maten los mas que se pueda, no importa el cartel, son buenas noticias, el unico narco bueno es el narco muerto!

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    7. Jalos has dimes. Greetings to the people from Turlock, CA. (Mass Jalos Population there)

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  3. AMLO said cartel de Sinaloa don’t traffic fentanyl

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  4. Keep messing with the Chinese like trump did they gunna unleash deadlier corona virus 🦠 strain we all gunna die..why don’t they instead treat junkies or prevent addiction. War on drugs failed. Drugs have never been this cheap or available. Every city is flooded with every kind of drug. Drugs have never been this cheap either.. time for a new direction.

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    Replies
    1. Your going in circles, you already said cheap, many a times.

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  5. Who fought in teocaltiche jalisco?

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    1. CDS Mayos Grupo Flechas Vs CJNG Jardinero

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    2. @5:38 Son gente de MG(chapos) vs 08(cjng)

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    3. 5:38 Flechas are not in teocal bra

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  6. The Chinese Communist Government learned a lot from the British Empire Opium wars .
    Its using those lessons to wage an information, drug and a economic war against the USA.

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    1. 5:41 Negative big chief. Why wasn't nobody saying that in the 70s, 80s, 90s and pre 2020s? The drug craze was in FULL swing back then too. Did Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia decide to wage a drug war against the US? Nope. Simple supply and demand. Same with China.

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  7. The streets are filled right now with white blank Farmapram (alprazolam), blue B707s (clonazepam), and the green S903s (clonazepam + RC benzo) and let me tell you.. Stay the hell away from the green S903s. Too often they’re laced with Flubromazolam which lasts days and is probably the most fcked up drug I’ve ever done. Even days later could barley walk and it doesn’t show up as any particular color on the testing reagents.

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    Replies
    1. And you put that stuff in your body why?

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    2. 10:07 Because I thought the (green) S903s, we’re just clonazepam like the (blue) B707’s because that’s what the testing reagent “indicated”. Not some mix of clonaz and some crazy RC benzo like flubromazolam. The blues and whites are fine though. Just normal clonazepam or alprazolam usually. Also the yellow R309s are usually fine too, like just Etizolam or something. Normal shit. Just stay away from the green S903s. They’re inherently mixed, and usually with crazy RC benzos.

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    3. If it's prescribed by a doctor, YES, I put it in my body.

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    4. 1:20 Docs will typically only prescribe even worse shit. Not that medical prescriptions even have anything to do with this conversation anyways.

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    5. what's the Tranq shit that theyre putting in these pills

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    6. @3:59

      https://www.borderlandbeat.com/2022/10/philadelphia-pennsylvania-emerging-drug.html

      Delete
  8. I still don't understand how pill presses work. If the pills are made just by compressing powder, it's crazy that they hold their shape forever.

    Back when I was an oxycodone addict, I bought some fake perc 30s once. They looked right and even had that perc taste, but they did absolutely nothing.

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    Replies
    1. The pressed ones are usually even more solid and harder to break than the legit ones.

      Delete

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