in

German Court Sentences Main Accused to Prison in ‘Chemical Revolution’ Case

judge sentencing

An online shop offered drugs of all kinds for purchase at the click of a mouse – the Giessen Regional Court has now sentenced seven men to several years’ imprisonment for their involvement in it.

On Friday, the judges found the accused, including a man who was considered to be the initiator, guilty of having worked for the “Chemical Revolution” platform, which is operated on the Internet and anonymous darknet.

When it was shut down in 2019, the investigators had spoken of the nation’s largest online drug shop, which is also said to have features of a legal platform such as volume discounts and customer comments.

The Frankfurt Public Prosecutor’s Office assumed that the defendants earned around one million euros in the form of the crypto currency Bitcoin with the shop. Kilos of drugs such as amphetamine, marijuana or cocaine and ecstasy had been brought to Germany from the Netherlands from autumn 2017, said the chairman.

The goods were transported to various locations across Germany, including Ortenberg in Hesse. It should then have been packed and sent to the customer.

The trial, which began a year ago, covered only a small part of the prosecution’s allegations. It assumed a total of 320 acts between September 2017 and February 2019. In Giessen there were a total of nine allegations and the early days of the shop. Some cases have been dropped. Not all men are part of the gang.

According to the court, the main defendant was responsible for ordering the narcotics, marketing and administration or customer service. The other men had their own roles, were responsible for import or transport, were couriers or “errand boys”. The men between the ages of 29 and 46 had mostly admitted the allegations.

Four of them were convicted, among other things, of “gang-like illicit trading with narcotics in large quantities”. The court did not consider the remaining men to be members of the gang; some of them were convicted as helpers or for importing drugs. The court imposed terms of between two years and eight months and nine years and two months for the main defendant.

He is also said to be placed in a detention center after a certain period of detention because of his cocaine addiction. The judgments are not yet final. The district court will continue to deal with the “Chemical Revolution” case, as there are a total of eleven defendants.

What do you think?

46 points
Upvote Downvote

Written by Kofi Anash

police arrest night

Australian Parliament Approves Bill that Gives Police Powers to Hack and Disrupt Dark Web

murder for hire

LA Man Charged in ‘Murder for Hire’ Plot to Argue for Pretrial Release