Qingdao Sigma Chemical Co., Ltd (International, US, EU, Canada and Australia domestic

It was pretty hilarious watching them trying to figure it out. I thing that for me was they get to decide what you could possibly use it for. Like what if I am using it as paint or testing fertilizer? They were like, yea there can’t be a use for this so toss it.
Officer Jorge came across as completely incompetent in this episode. The moment he confidently declared the vial of blue powder to be "CU50 is copper sulfate" was an instant facepalm—seriously? Try GHK-Cu 50mg, genius. That level of ignorance was painful to watch. And I have a pretty solid guess about BT10 as well.

The whole "not for human OR animal use" drama was laughable, almost as much as their fixation on the shipping addresses—one package going to an apartment in Miami, another to Texas. As if that alone proves anything. But the real kicker? No labels on the vials. Watching Jorge and his supervisor stumble around, completely out of their depth, was pure comedy.

On the plus side, at least the vials were packed well—the hard plastic 10-pack cases were a nice touch.

Honestly, this episode is pure entertainment. I replay it every other day just for the laughs.
 
Not seeing anything beyond "counterfeit goods" in any of the follow-up articles on this bust.

It may have no direct connection to gear, but, what it may have done is revealed the techniques used by other smuggling groups, especially the fake seals. It's unlikely these were the only ones doing this, just the ones who got caught.
The indictment read as though other investigations were being conducted in other jurisdictions based on similar use of counterfeit security seals.

The focus did seem to be more on counterfeit retail goods and not as much on illicit drugs or chemical precursors. I can't imagine a presser not mentioning those is there was anything found.
 
The indictment read as though other investigations were being conducted in other jurisdictions based on similar use of counterfeit security seals.

The focus did seem to be more on counterfeit retail goods and not as much on illicit drugs or chemical precursors. I can't imagine a presser not mentioning those is there was anything found.

I guess it makes sense when you're dealing in counterfeit luxury goods that are nearly indistinguishable from the originals, they can figure out how to make seals that look like the real thing too.

Saw some Chinese "superclone" watches that are so good, it almost seems stupid to buy an original at this point because to anyone but a dealer (and only after taking off the back), there's no way to tell the difference.
 
It has to do with how the testing process actually works. They aren’t taking the sample, looking at it, and seeing “oh ok it’s hgh.” Instead they’re taking the sample, looking for HGH, and seeing if there is in fact any in there. If you send them BPC and tell them it’s HGH, they’re going to get a negative result. If you don’t tell them what they’re looking for then the test can’t proceed.

it’s simply a limitation of how HPLC testing operates — it requires a target. If you don’t provide one then the lab would have to run the procedure over and over against different targets until they identify one. I’m sure Jano could do this but he’d charge much more for it.
i wonder if anybody sent just shitty know oil to test out the validity of Janosik. Feels like this guy/company easily slap anything on the results
 
Yeah, “it says it’s for research only but it’s going to an apartment building”, sorry future scientists, if you live in an apartment you clearly don’t do research
Is that why my CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing machine wasn't delivered? I knew living in an apartment in the hood would limit my future experiments. But I can't find an abundance of homeless hobos to experiment on in the rich area. Foiled again!!!
 
they made a huge bust of the ring in LA that china smuggled things in and had warehouses where shipped Chinese goods out from counterfeit goods and some "pharma" they said. ie the ship shippings lines. they just counterfeited the seals on the containers and open them up take goods out and re seal. my guess is it had something to do with tracy domestic wheelhouses.
Most likely nothing to do with tracy. Busts like these regularly happen on smaller scales, but because QSC kept operating it wasn't relevant news. Now Every customs bust is confirmation bias. Tracy/QSC will not go underground because of a US based indictment or bust. US based charges usually result in shipment pauses, while still communicating. Going completely dark indicates a source/origin based issue. We need news on china based busts to have a clearer picture. Those guys don't make announcements until 'everything' has been cooked and sanitized
 
Officer Jorge came across as completely incompetent in this episode. The moment he confidently declared the vial of blue powder to be "CU50 is copper sulfate" was an instant facepalm—seriously? Try GHK-Cu 50mg, genius. That level of ignorance was painful to watch. And I have a pretty solid guess about BT10 as well.

The whole "not for human OR animal use" drama was laughable, almost as much as their fixation on the shipping addresses—one package going to an apartment in Miami, another to Texas. As if that alone proves anything. But the real kicker? No labels on the vials. Watching Jorge and his supervisor stumble around, completely out of their depth, was pure comedy.

On the plus side, at least the vials were packed well—the hard plastic 10-pack cases were a nice touch.

Honestly, this episode is pure entertainment. I replay it every other day just for the laughs.
Well as my professor once said: "When you know the answer, any question appears very easy". They seem ignorant about knowing the identity of a random pep, yet you have people making orders for peps that they know they ordered but struggle to know "which pep/oil is what?"
 
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