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HTW
09-15-2012, 12:01 PM
Man accused of manufacturing illicit steroids

OMAHA, Neb. — A 40-year-old Omaha man was arrested following a four-month investigation into illicit drug transactions.

Officers from multiple law enforcement agencies arrested Anthony T. Acome near 91st and Fort streets on Tuesday.

According to the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, officers served a search warrant at Acome's home immediately after the arrest, where they found uncovered vials of illicit steroids along with $15,000 cash and 27 firearms.

Authorities said Acome was manufacturing steroids from chemicals he had shipped to him from overseas. Acome is accused of selling the product on Omaha streets.

Acome faces three counts of delivery of a controlled substance and one count each of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance and possession of a firearm while delivering a controlled substance.

132318

Read more: http://www.ketv.com/news/local-news/Man-accused-of-manufacturing-illicit-steroids/-/9674510/16594102/-/le9mfrz/-/index.html#ixzz26YQnfVfB

Omaha police discovered in April that four local residents were players in a steroid ring with origins in China and a drug kingpin in New York. Local narcotics detectives say they stumbled onto the largest steroid bust of their careers, one involving several hundred thousand dollars of the drug.

Christopher J. Bowers, 45, of Omaha, Ryan M. Bowers, 29, of Papillion, Bernard Venditte, 31, of Omaha and Jeanine A. Rowe, 35, of Papillion each was charged with possession of illegal steroids with intent to deliver.

The four are accused of acting as delivery agents for large shipments of home-cooked testosterone cocktails.

Thousands of vials of illegal steroids were shipped into the Omaha area before and during the months-long investigation, said Omaha Police Sgt. Dave Bianchi.

Raw hormones from China were mailed to the drug operation's leader in New York.

Bianchi said the ringleader turned it into an injectable solution and then bottled, labeled and shipped the toxic product to the Omaha and Papillion home addresses of those arrested.

Their job was to repackage and mail the vials to online buyers.

The investigation began in April when a U.S. Postal Service inspector noticed something odd about two packages.

Two Express Mail packages with consecutive numbers had been mailed from different post offices in New York. Both were addressed to Christopher Bowers' home in Omaha, but the return addresses were for nonexistent businesses in New York, according to court documents.

Those were red flags, indicating that drugs likely were in the packages.

Police followed the delivery of the packages to Bowers' home in midtown and discovered hundreds of vials of testosterone.

These steroid cocktails would never be used as legitimate medical treatments, said Omaha narcotics Detective Greg Hamill.

The home-brewed anabolic steroids had labels from a fake laboratory called Lexx Labs and were named Sustanon-300, Nandro-100, Masteron-100 and Deca-300. The doses could be up to 100 times higher than those used to treat medical conditions.


Ryan Bowers
http://content.omaha.com/media/maps/ps/2012/sept/rbowers.jpg




Christopher Bowers
http://content.omaha.com/media/maps/ps/2012/sept/cbowers.jpg




Bernard Venditte
http://content.omaha.com/media/maps/ps/2012/sept/bvenditte.jpg




Jeanine Rowe
http://content.omaha.com/media/maps/ps/2012/sept/jrowe.jpg



Hamill called the mixtures “ridiculously toxic.”

“I believe some of the drugs would have stayed in Omaha, but we have nothing to indicate that the steroids were pushed on kids or legitimate athletes,” Bianchi said.

Hamill said the majority of steroid users are men looking to quickly bulk up muscle mass.

Steroid abuse has been linked to serious health problems, including liver damage, kidney impairment or failure and enlargement of the heart, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Anabolic steroids fall under the same legal classification as the illegal possession of oxycodone or vicodin.

When Bowers was questioned, authorities said, he implicated his nephew, Ryan Bowers.

The younger man then indicated to police that a friend, Venditte, had approached him with the opportunity to make some money by repackaging steroids sent from New York, court documents state.

Police said the supplier likely had used an online message board to approach one of the Omaha-area residents, who had purchased and personally used steroids in the past.

More steroids were found in Venditte's west Omaha apartment, and then detectives uncovered Rowe's connection to Venditte and yet more steroids.

“This was the largest steroid arrest I've been involved with in 20 years,” Bianchi said.

During the investigation, officers confiscated 4,430 vials — each containing 10 doses of illegal anabolic steroids.

Also collected were 3,763 grams — or more than eight pounds — of raw hormone materials that originated in China, Bianchi said.

Hamill estimated that an $800 investment in raw materials from China plus some basic lab equipment could turn into a $20,000 to $30,000 profit.

Ryan and Christopher Bowers, Venditte and Rowe were meant to be paid for each repackaged set of steroids that was sent to an online purchaser, Bianchi said.

Once the four local residents were charged, the Omaha police narcotics unit, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency and New York law officers built a case against the ringleader, Nicholas Cangiano, 34.

Cangiano was indicted in May in U.S. District Court in Nebraska on two counts: conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute anabolic steroids, and distribution of steroids.

The four local people arrested have been released from jail on bail, and their cases are set for trial in Douglas County District Court.

The felony charge against themcarries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, a $25,000 fine or both.

Christopher Bowers, a veteran air traffic controller at Eppley Airfield, had never been charged with a crime before in Nebraska or federal court, according to court documents. The Federal Aviation Administration said he has been suspended from his job pending the outcome of the case.

Rowe had a similarly clean record. Ryan Bowers and Venditte had not been previously charged with a drug-related crime in Nebraska.

The attorney for the Bowers men and Rowe's lawyer declined to comment. Calls to Venditte's attorney were not returned.

Omaha.com

Swiper
09-15-2012, 01:22 PM
who's the victim of this so called crime?

answer: the 4 people that were arrested. The criminals are the people who are prosecuting them for mixing powder and oil. makes no sense. if people want to use steroids, let them, it's their choice not the govts.

Curt James
09-15-2012, 01:56 PM
who's the victim of this so called crime?

answer: the 4 people that were arrested. The criminals are the people who are prosecuting them for mixing powder and oil. makes no sense. if people want to use steroids, let them, it's their choice not the govts.

I guess the victim is the federal government? They're responsible for the drug laws? Although it's difficult to perceive of them as the victim when they benefit from cheap prison labor and all the fines levied.

Regardless, definitely agree that it should be a citizen's choice and not the government's.

More money should be spent on rehabilitation when necessary and education than on the absurd (and what I'd call truly criminal) amounts spent on interdiction and incarceration.

HTW
09-15-2012, 02:14 PM
On the first case , if you click on the link after the paragraph, the police officer towards the end says he was most concerned about the Steroids , Not the 27 guns that this guy had in his home ... That confused me .. Im not condoning what this guy did at all, But why is the Police main concern Steroids , not 27 guns that they have no clue if they are legally owned or not .. And I do not mind guns either, but 27 of them ??????

Curt James
09-15-2012, 02:46 PM
On the first case , if you click on the link after the paragraph, the police officer towards the end says he was most concerned about the Steroids , Not the 27 guns that this guy had in his home ... That confused me .. Im not condoning what this guy did at all, But why is the Police main concern Steroids , not 27 guns that they have no clue if they are legally owned or not .. And I do not mind guns either, but 27 of them ??????


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HubxUggyinU

TheABomb
09-15-2012, 03:43 PM
I can't sympathize with anyone who gets busted for this sort of stuff. One, because brewing stuff on your own and selling it to others IS in fact dangerous. I see people get abscesses, infections, fevers, and hospitalization from cheaply produced gear all the time. These people don't have the first understanding of the type of quality control that has taken companies like Eli Lilly and Watson decades to master. And two, because, you know what the law is (just or not), and you have to be pretty stupid to think you can get away with it for long periods of time.

All the more reason to legalize the use of reputable brand gear under medical supervision for those seeking just to add some size and strength.

hifrommike65
09-15-2012, 03:46 PM
Thank goodness for HRT!

TheABomb
09-15-2012, 03:48 PM
On the first case , if you click on the link after the paragraph, the police officer towards the end says he was most concerned about the Steroids , Not the 27 guns that this guy had in his home ... That confused me .. Im not condoning what this guy did at all, But why is the Police main concern Steroids , not 27 guns that they have no clue if they are legally owned or not .. And I do not mind guns either, but 27 of them ??????

Steroids themselves should not be the concern at all. Highly overdosed gear, bunk gear, cheaply produced gear that leads to infections, I see this happen all the time. The people who get fucked over are the users really, not the sellers. Are they guilty of this? I can't say. But everyone on here is smart enough to know that there's a decent chance.

The Big Sexy
09-15-2012, 04:58 PM
who's the victim of this so called crime?

answer: the 4 people that were arrested. The criminals are the people who are prosecuting them for mixing powder and oil. makes no sense. if people want to use steroids, let them, it's their choice not the govts.

Agree with part, mildly disagree with the other. The US People not benefitting from tax dollars that could be collected from income made - but, it's estimated that 50% of people don't pay taxes anyway... so... it might be moot.

Curt James
09-15-2012, 06:42 PM
All the more reason to legalize the use of reputable brand gear under medical supervision for those seeking just to add some size and strength.

This.


Thank goodness for HRT!

Here's my hijack: Great avatar shot of Boyer Coe!

Diggy
09-15-2012, 11:05 PM
Healthy lab setup

Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk 2

joe-ali
09-16-2012, 04:44 AM
So the moral of the story for the US is work, pay super high taxes, eat crap food, drink and smoke and die, everything else is illegal. what a free country!!! usa usa

bigchamp89
09-16-2012, 07:12 PM
who's the victim of this so called crime?



the customers who bought product from these pieces of shit and their bathtub mixture of homebrews

that bottle of BA looks like its years old and probably lost half its potency, and lmao @ plain ole' canola oil
yeah im sure these four clowns were super concerned about quality control judging by how dirty that sh!t looks

<3 ugl

Swiper
09-16-2012, 09:12 PM
the customers who bought product from these pieces of shit and their bathtub mixture of homebrews

that bottle of BA looks like its years old and probably lost half its potency, and lmao @ plain ole' canola oil
yeah im sure these four clowns were super concerned about quality control judging by how dirty that sh!t looks

<3 ugl

how are they victims when they knowingly are buying ugl aas? they know the risks. if they don't,u can't police stupidity.

heftizzle
09-17-2012, 01:25 PM
All I can say is it created quite the stir in this city. Don't know the fallout yet and how much of that trickled into the hands of other people in town. They say it was mailed across the US. 4,400 bottles is a lot of stuff.

heftizzle
09-17-2012, 01:30 PM
I can't sympathize with anyone who gets busted for this sort of stuff. One, because brewing stuff on your own and selling it to others IS in fact dangerous. I see people get abscesses, infections, fevers, and hospitalization from cheaply produced gear all the time. These people don't have the first understanding of the type of quality control that has taken companies like Eli Lilly and Watson decades to master. And two, because, you know what the law is (just or not), and you have to be pretty stupid to think you can get away with it for long periods of time.

All the more reason to legalize the use of reputable brand gear under medical supervision for those seeking just to add some size and strength.

They broke the law and other than that I think they did nothing wrong. If you think it takes decades for perfect this then you are all about big government and big business. That is the problem. So did it take decades for apple and the iphone? Or android for that matter. I agree there is a right way to do things and a wrong way. What did these guys know exactly? I don't know, but I don't think that big pharma has all the answers either.

Prince
09-17-2012, 02:01 PM
Right, UGL stuff can be very dangerous, and all of these UGL's would not exist if the stupid government would back off on AAS usage and let adults decided what they want to do with their own bodies.

TheABomb
09-17-2012, 04:13 PM
the customers who bought product from these pieces of shit and their bathtub mixture of homebrews

that bottle of BA looks like its years old and probably lost half its potency, and lmao @ plain ole' canola oil
yeah im sure these four clowns were super concerned about quality control judging by how dirty that sh!t looks

<3 ugl

agree

TheABomb
09-17-2012, 04:14 PM
Right, UGL stuff can be very dangerous, and all of these UGL's would not exist if the stupid government would back off on AAS usage and let adults decided what they want to do with their own bodies.


also agree

Swiper
09-17-2012, 04:56 PM
the customers who bought product from these pieces of shit and their bathtub mixture of homebrews

that bottle of BA looks like its years old and probably lost half its potency, and lmao @ plain ole' canola oil
yeah im sure these four clowns were super concerned about quality control judging by how dirty that sh!t looks

<3 ugl

they know it's ugl. it's their choice to use it. u can't police stupidity.

Ace28
09-19-2012, 07:36 PM
Looks like the Cornhuskers may be in for a down year.

MattyH7688
09-19-2012, 07:52 PM
Looks like the Cornhuskers may be in for a down year.

Lmao

LookinFit75
09-19-2012, 08:38 PM
Looks like the Cornhuskers may be in for a down year.
baahahaha!

juiceinator3000
09-19-2012, 08:48 PM
Lexx labs was a scummy shit lab anyway. I know exactly where they were pushing product too. I wouldn't run their gear if it was the last bottle of test on earth.

MattyH7688
09-19-2012, 09:02 PM
I think this just shows everyone.. ANYONE can start a UGL. If you have a couple grand for supplies, internet access, and a printer.. bam your in business.