Purveyors Of Black-Market Pharmaceuticals Target Immigrants
The bootleg medications were smuggled across the border and sold to mostly Latino immigrants in public spaces throughout Los Angeles 鈥 at swap meets, parks, beauty salons and makeshift stands outside mom-and-pop grocery stores.
The drugs were cheap, and the customers 鈥 mostly from Mexico and Central America 鈥 did not need prescriptions to buy them. Some of the products featured brand names and colorful packaging that immigrants knew well from their home countries 鈥 including Ciprofloxacina, a potent antibiotic, and Dolo Nervi Doce 鈥 translated as 鈥淧ain Nerve 12鈥 鈥 an injectable B-complex vitamin taken for fatigue.
Many were sheer counterfeits. Others, though legal south of the border, were not approved for sale in the United States. Some had expired. Still others would have been legal if sold by people licensed to do so 鈥 but none of the sellers held pharmacist licenses or any other medical credential.
L.A. County authorities seized the drugs last month in an operation that led to the . Their haul included 100,000 foreign-made pills, compounds and injectable medicines they said could have caused serious harm or even death to consumers.
Immigrants, not just from Hispanic countries but from all over the world 鈥 and some non-immigrants too 鈥 are purchasing a wide array of illegal medications in black markets that are common not only in Southern California but in states such as Arizona, Maryland, Texas, Virginia and Washington, according to law enforcement officials and others familiar with the trade.
鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing this in all communities across the country that don鈥檛 have access to health care services,鈥 said Adolph Falcon, executive vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based National Alliance for Hispanic Health, which provides information and health-related assistance to Hispanic communities nationwide. 鈥淭hese products prey on the desperation of people who can鈥檛 afford to see a doctor or go to a legitimate pharmacy.鈥
The current political climate in the U.S. is also pushing some immigrants to the black market, doctors and researchers say.
鈥淢any patients are afraid they鈥檒l be deported if they come into our clinics, so they buy from the street, said Dr. Anjali Mahoney, the Orange County, Calif., regional medical director for AltaMed Health Services, a large chain of federally funded community clinics whose patients are primarily Latino.
鈥淧eople are paying for something that doesn鈥檛 work and could even harm them, when they could have just as easily come to a clinic and get safe care with a doctor,鈥 Mahoney said.
She added that every one of AltaMed鈥檚 23 clinics in Southern California has reported problems with off-the-street medications. One Latina woman was hospitalized after taking an opiate advertised as blood pressure medicine, she noted.
These dubious products targeted by law enforcement are different from the legitimate prescription pharmaceuticals every year by millions of U.S. residents who cross the border into Canada and Mexico or use licensed online pharmacies abroad to buy their medications at a fraction of the price they would pay in this country.
Although those imports are also technically illegal, from the Food and Drug Administration allow federal agents to take a hands-off approach.
That鈥檚 not the case with wares peddled on the streets by often unscrupulous operators.
鈥淐ounterfeit medicines may contain the wrong ingredients, contain too little, too much or no active ingredient at all 鈥 or contain other, potentially life-threatening hidden ingredients,鈥 said Jeremy Kahn, an FDA spokesman.
Drug companies and pharmacies also have an interest in disrupting the distribution of such medications. The nationwide value of this pharmaceutical black market is difficult to gauge, but it may displace billions of dollars鈥 worth of legally approved medicine, said Roger Bate, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute and author of the book 鈥淧hake: The Deadly World of Falsified and Substandard Medicines.鈥
Between October 2017 and July 2018, FDA officials confiscated nearly 22,000 packages containing illegal pharmaceuticals from international mail facilities, Kahn said. He said authorities routinely impound various opioids as well as dietary supplements laced with erectile dysfunction drugs and other dubious products. They come from India, China and across Europe 鈥 鈥渏ust about everywhere,鈥 Kahn said.
The medications seized by the FDA are just the tip of the iceberg. The agency estimates it is able inspect sent via international mail that are believed to contain drugs. And many illicit products arrive not through the mail but in suitcases, cars, trucks or cargo ships, authorities say.
The purveyors of these 鈥渄odgy medicines鈥 are 鈥渕yriad and global,鈥 including Chinese and Indian manufacturers, Russian mobsters, Mexican gangs and domestic U.S. groups, said Bate. 鈥淭here are charlatans and odious actors who don鈥檛 mind if their product kills children, adults or breadwinners of entire families.鈥
Nationwide, many local police departments lack the resources or mandate to investigate sales of illicit pharmaceuticals; otherwise, the number of arrests would probably be much higher, public and industry officials say.
鈥淣ot enough attention is paid to this issue,鈥 said Jon Roth, CEO of the California Pharmacists Association. 鈥淚t鈥檚 probably largely operating in the dark shadows of every community. If we put the resources there, we鈥檇 see how wide it is.鈥
L.A. County is one jurisdiction paying attention. In 1999, it formed the Health Authority Law Enforcement Task Force (HALT), after two Latino infants died from taking illegal medications. HALT is the group that made the August arrests.
So far this year, it has arrested 34 people in 54 cases, 48 of them involving illegal pharmaceuticals sold to immigrants, said Erick Aguilar, one of the investigators.
Illegal pharmaceuticals are being sold to immigrants in 鈥渆very rural swap meet you can find,鈥 and the sellers are becoming more sophisticated, Aguilar said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e better at hiding it,鈥 and 鈥渢hey鈥檙e more careful who they sell to.鈥
In February 2019, three men 鈥 two in Southern California and one from Salem, Ore. 鈥 to the illegal importation and sale of $11 million worth of pharmaceutical-grade erectile dysfunction drugs falsely marketed across the U.S. as herbal remedies for men. One of the perpetrators imported from China powdered tadalafil, the active ingredient in , and used it to make 5.5 million pills with up to 14 times the level contained in Cialis, according to the FDA.
In 2017 and 2018, the Phoenix police department鈥檚 organized-crime commercial unit raided 30 pharmacies in Latino neighborhoods, confiscating 鈥渕illions of dosages of illegal medicines, some of them outdated by 15 years,鈥 said Detective Sgt. David Lake, who led the unit.
But not all the sellers were members of organized crime. Lake recalled one woman who genuinely believed she was doing something positive for her community by distributing black-market birth control pills.
鈥淪he said local girls were having too many babies, and she wanted to help them, but the babies kept being born,鈥 Lake recalled. 鈥淲hen I told her the drugs were counterfeit, she cried for a half-hour straight.鈥
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