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    20 arrested in crackdown on Internet pharmacies
    Wednesday, April 20, 2005 Posted: 2:00 PM EDT (1800 GMT)

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Twenty people in the United States and abroad were arrested on charges they ran Internet pharmacies that illegally shipped narcotics, steroids and amphetamines to teenagers and other buyers around the world, federal authorities said Wednesday.

    The arrests were the result of a yearlong investigation by six federal agencies of online pharmacies that often operate in the shadows of the Internet, with no fixed address and no way to track where they are located, Drug Enforcement Administrator Karen Tandy said.

    "The Internet has become an open medicine cabinet," Tandy said. "Strangers are peddling drugs in your home and you don't even know it."

    But with the arrests, she added: "We've logged off some of the worst e-traffickers out there."

    The drugs were shipped to buyers with little or no effort to verify ages or medical need, allowing teenagers or drug abusers easy access to addictive and dangerous drugs, officials said.

    Tandy and officials from the FBI, Customs, the Internal Revenue Service, Food and Drug Administration and the Postal Service gave details of Operation Cyber Chase at a news conference. They said the pharmacies forfeited 41 bank accounts valued at more than $6 million.

    Among the organizations targeted was a Philadelphia-based Internet pharmacy that allegedly smuggled prescription painkillers, steroids and amphetamines into the United States from India, Germany, Hungary and elsewhere, repackaged them and sold them throughout the world, Tandy said.

    U.S. arrests took place in Fort Lauderdale and Sarasota, Florida; Abilene and Tyler, Texas; New York City and Rochester, New York.; Philadelphia; and Greenville, South Carolina. Authorities also made arrests in Australia, Costa Rica and India.

    A study by the Government Accountability Office last year found it was easy to order drugs online. Some drugs received from foreign pharmacies were counterfeit and many came with no instructions or warnings, the GAO said. Others arrived in damaged or unconventional packaging.

    The FDA has led the government's enforcement efforts against Internet pharmacies as part of its strenuous opposition to the legalization of imported prescription drugs.
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