Tal Prihar, Sentenced for Money Laundering Scheme
An Israeli national was sentenced yesterday to 97 months in
prison for operating DeepDotWeb (DDW), a website that connected internet users
with Darknet marketplaces, where they purchased illegal firearms, malware and
hacking tools, stolen financial data, heroin, fentanyl and other illicit
materials.
According to court documents, Tal Prihar, 37, an Israeli
citizen residing in Brazil, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit money
laundering in March 2021. Beginning in October 2013, Prihar owned and operated
DDW, along with co-defendant Michael Phan, 34, of Israel. In addition to
providing general information about the Darknet, DDW provided users with direct
links to illegal Darknet marketplaces, which are not accessible through traditional
search engines.
For providing these links, Prihar and Phan received kickback
payments from the marketplaces in the form of virtual currency, including
approximately 8,155 bitcoins (worth approximately $8.4 million at the time of
the transactions). To conceal the nature and source of these illegal kickback
payments, Prihar transferred the payments from his DDW bitcoin wallet to other
bitcoin accounts and to bank accounts he controlled in the names of shell
companies. DDW was seized by federal authorities in April 2019, and Prihar has
agreed to forfeit $8,414,173. Phan remains abroad and is currently undergoing
extradition proceedings in Israel.
Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Polite Jr. of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Cindy K. Chung for the
Western District of Pennsylvania made the announcement.
The FBI’s Pittsburgh Field Office investigated the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jessica Lieber Smolar for the
Western District of Pennsylvania and Trial Attorneys C. Alden Pelker of the
Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and
Alexander Gottfried of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section
prosecuted the case.
The department thanks French authorities as well as its law
enforcement colleagues at the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, IRS-Criminal
Investigation, Brazilian Federal Police Cyber Division, Israeli National
Police, Dutch National Police, Europol Darkweb Team, Federal Criminal Police
Office of Germany, and National Crime Agency in the United Kingdom. Significant
assistance was provided by the Justice Department’s Office of International
Affairs.
This case was brought in conjunction with the Joint Criminal
Opioid and Darknet Enforcement (J-CODE) Team. Established within the FBI’s
Hi-Tech Organized Crime Unit, J-CODE is a U.S. Government initiative aimed at
targeting drug trafficking, especially fentanyl and other opioids, on the
Darknet. The J-CODE team brings together agents, analysts, and professional
staff with expertise in drugs, gangs, health care fraud and more.
This prosecution is also a result of an Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation.
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