Daquan Armstead charged in string of random NYC attacks on women over the past month: NYPD

A deranged woman-hating maniac wanted for more than a half-dozen random attacks on women in the Big Apple is finally in custody, police and sources said Tuesday.

Daquan Armstead, 31, was picked up by cops shortly after midnight and charged with third-degree assault and harassment in eight unprovoked attacks on women over the past month, the sources said.

That includes an April 17 attack on a 27-year-old administrator at New York University, who was slugged in the face while walking through Washington Square Park around 10:30 a.m., according to police.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating, although details weren’t released.

Daquan Armstead, 31, is charged with eight random attacks on women in the Big Apple dating to February. Matthew McDermott

Armstead is also being charged in seven other attacks this year.

The violent spree began on Feb. 12, when police said Armstead allegedly walked up to a 30-year-old woman on Elizabeth Street around 11:50 a.m. and punched her without warning, then fled.

On March 24 he allegedly attacked a 30-year-old woman on Delancy Street at around 2 a.m., hitting the victim in the back of the head as she turned. He then ran from the scene.

The following day Armstead is charged with punching a 36-year-old woman in the back as she walked along Chrystie and Rivington streets around 10:15 a.m., police said.

On April 2, he allegedly slugged another woman after he asked the 38-year-old victim for $1 and she replied that she had no cash so he punched her in the back of the head.

Police said he is also accused of attacking two women in separate incidents on Delancey Street on April 5 a 25-year-old who was slugged on the right side of her head around 12:25 p.m. and a 44-year-old who was punched in the face just five minutes later, according to cops.

In the last alleged attack before the assault on the NYU administrator, police said Armstead punched a 24-year-old woman on Stanton Street after she also refused when he asked her for $1 shortly before 10 a.m.

Police said Daquan Armstead allegedly attacked a woman at Essex and Delancey streets on April 5 — and another woman down the street five minutes later. Google Maps
Daquan Armstead is chaarged with random attacks on two women on Delancey Street earlier this month — and six other assaults since Februrary. Google Maps

Records show his prior busts date to a 2021 misdemeanor asault case.

He is expected to be arraigned on the new charges later on Tuesday.

Police have also been investigating a series of other attacks on woman that have not been linked to Armstead, including a 23-year-old woman slugged outside Union Square McDonald’s last month.

Among the other recent victims was Halley Kate, an influencer with 1.1 million followers on TikTok, who posted a video last week saying she was assaulted so viciously that she blacked out.

Daquan Armstead, 31, was arrested early Tuesday and is being charged with eight random attacks on women. Obtained by NY Post

Skiboky Stora, 40, a criminal with an extensive criminal record, was busted in that case.

In another random attack, a 57-year-old Brooklyn school bus aide was slugged by an unhinged man — a brutal attack that broke her jaw and knocked out several teeth — in Crown Heights, cops said.

Franz Jeudy, 33 — who has a history of sucker-punch attacks and mental illness — was hit with misdemeanor assault charges in that attack, according to a criminal complaint..

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Retiree loses $1m in timeshare fraud by Mexican drug cartel known for cannibalism

Two California retirees say they lost nearly $1 million after falling victim to a bizarre timeshare scam run by a notorious Mexican drug cartel that is known for horrifying claims of cannibalism.

The rapidly evolving scam, run by the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG), is estimated to have fleeced hundreds of millions of dollars from Americans each year, including James, 76, and his wife Nicki, 72, who were looking to sell their Lake Tahoe timeshare.

James, who bought the property in the mid-90s for about $9,000 but only stayed there twice, jumped at the opportunity when he received a call from a real estate agent named Michael in October 2022 who offered to buy the timeshare.

“He was good at ingratiating himself,” James told DailyMail.com. “He had an air of confidence. I thought ‘This guy’s legit.’”

The scam is run by the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG). REUTERS

The agent, who James only realized later had a slight Spanish accent, claimed to have found a Mexican investor willing to pay upwards of $22,000 for the property.

The cartel, known for drug trafficking, gruesomely slaughtering their enemies in public and forcing recruits to be trained in cannibalism at “terror schools,” has netted hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade preying on elderly American timeshare owners in similar schemes.

Days after their initial call, Michael called back to say would require $2,600 to cover the cross-border transaction, which he assured James would be reimbursed.

James, who did not share his last name with the Daily Mail, admitted his wife had concerns about the deal from the beginning, but he was reassured when Michael said the buyer would send the cash to US Commercial Escrow Corps, a company with a registered address in Manhattan.

The cartel has reportedly stolen hundreds of millions of dollars from elderly Americans with timeshares. AP

James even spoke with a representative of the company, who he said spoke with an American accent.

He was then hit with a second fee, costing $3,600.

“I felt alright,” James said. “I thought ‘I’m getting reimbursed for this, all will be well.’”

Eventually, the fees racked up to $50,000, at which point James was contacted by a man who claimed to be with the UIF, Mexico’s financial intelligence unit. The man claimed James had committed several violations and would be extradited if he did not pay even heftier fines.

All the while, James said the money always appeared in the New York escrow account, though no funds were ever released.

James and his wife lost nearly $1 million dollars from the scam.

He was then convinced by the fraudsters to invest $32,000 in a sustainable housing investment in Mexico, eventually making a dozen payments for a variety of reasons.

James says he made his last payment in January, spending a stunning $890,000 across several bank accounts in Mexico.

To fund the payments he had to borrow $150,000 from his daughter and sell his childhood home.

James soon uncovered some worrying details, including that the website for the Atlanta real estate agency Michael claimed to be part of had been taken down days after their first phone call.

He also found that the email address he had for a contact at the Bank of Mexico was registered in Arizona, and unexplainably, Reykjavik, Iceland.

Timeshare owners desperate to offload them are particularly vulnerable to the scam.

“None of them had any addresses or locations in Mexico,” James said.

The office for the US Commercial Escrow Corps also did not exist, the outlet reported.

James then contacted Mike Finn, a lawyer who has represented thousands of people facing similar scams.

According to Finn, timeshare owners are especially vulnerable when it comes to these scams because many are desperate to offload them, so when an offer comes in “their excitement blinds them to the details.”

Once the money has been sent to Mexico, it’s more difficult to recover, and the FBI can only investigate with cooperation from local authorities. American lawyers are also unable to file civil suits beyond their jurisdiction, Finn explained.

American timeshare owners have been scammed out of $288 million over the last five years, including from frauds run by the Jalisco New Generation.

The “elaborate” scam cost James his life savings — and left his wife infuriated with him.

“It was very elaborate,” he said. “That’s why I was sucked in. I just thought there were too many players involved for it to be a scam.”

He added: “My wife said from the start that it didn’t sound right. Obviously, I should have listened to her. She’s p—– about the whole thing. But she’s kind of resigned herself to the fact that I was the stupid one.”

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University of South Carolina fraternity bus crashes in Mississippi injuring 11

Eleven people were injured when a bus carrying University of South Carolina students blew a tire and hit a concrete barrier in Mississippi.

Mississippi state troopers said the driver and a student were critically injured and taken by helicopter to hospitals after the crash Friday, while nine other students were taken by ambulance.

The 56 passengers were members of the university’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and their guests, who were traveling to New Orleans for an event.

11 students were injured on a bus after its tire blew out and hit a concrete barrier, near Bay St. Louis, Miss., on April 5, 2024. AP

Troopers said the driver, 55-year-old Tina Wilson of Roebuck, South Carolina, was traveling west on Interstate 10 near Bay St. Louis when a tire blew and the bus hit a center concrete barrier.

Bay St. Louis Police Chief Toby Schwartz said the bus careened away from the collision on two wheels before Wilson wrestled it back down onto all four wheels.

Schwartz told the Sun Herald of Biloxi that Wilson “took every piece of strength in her body to hold that steering wheel long enough to get it back down on the road.”

The windshield blew out, and Wilson was ejected when the bus hit the ground. A student, Paul Clune, then ran up and grabbed the steering wheel, Schwartz said. Clune tried to keep control until the bus skidded to a stop after nearly half a mile, WLOX-TV reported.

“If that bus had flipped, we would have had casualties,” Schwartz said. “It’s the bus driver and student that saved those kids. The bus driver is an incredible hero.”

First responders tended to a passenger from a bus after it blew a tire and hit a concrete barrier on Interstate 10 near Bay St. Louis, Miss., on Friday. AP

The uninjured students were taken by school bus to another location and later were taken to New Orleans. The interstate was blocked for hours.

University of South Carolina spokesperson Collyn Taylor said Saturday that travel arrangements have been made for students who want to return to Columbia and the university will provide mental health and academic support for anyone affected by the accident.

Taylor said university officials were trying to determine how many people were still in the hospital.

Troopers are investigating the crash by the bus owned by Dixon Motor Xpress of Chester, South Carolina.

The 56 passengers were members of the university’s chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and their guests, who were traveling to New Orleans for an event. AP

Owner Todd Dixon told The State of Columbia on Saturday that the crash was a “freak thing” and that his company has had no other accidents since it was created in 2019.

The company has a satisfactory safety rating, according to the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. In the previous two years, the company had passed an inspection and reported no accidents.

“We’ve always had safe operations,” Dixon said.

“We keep everything in top shape and don’t cut any corners, especially because we know we’re in the business of transporting people.”

Dixon praised Wilson, saying “she has years of experience and instinctively she is a safe driver.”

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Michigan man shoots Chiptole worker during brawl over guacamole

An enraged customer at a Michigan Chipotle shot an employee when a fight over guacamole escalated to bloodshed.

The suspect, 32, can be seen flashing the firearm as the employee, 21, grabbed him by the sweatshirt in an attempt to stop him from leaving the store, video of the wild brawl shows.

“I was just eating a bowl and I heard shouting. And then I looked over, they’re arguing. One of the workers went to the back, I don’t know why, and then when he was in the back, the customer walked around the counter, tried to grab his food and put it in a bag,” witness Thomas Huber told Fox 2 Detroit.

“Then the employee came back, and they started fighting, and then we heard a gunshot and just ran out as quick as we could.”

An enraged customer at a Michigan Chipotle shot an employee when a fight over guacamole escalated to bloodshed in a Michigan Chipotle. FOX 2 Detroit

The employee sustained a gunshot to the leg and was rushed to a local hospital in stable condition, Southfield police said.

The suspect — an unnamed Detroit man — fled the scene, but didn’t seem to be in any rush.

“He took his time getting out… probably 30 seconds after (the shot was fired),” said Micahel Beales, who filmed the bizarre altercation.

“I was in my car and I saw him just walk out to his car, close the door, and just drive off – he didn’t speed off or anything, it was weird to see.”

The suspect — an unnamed Detroit man — pulled out a gun during the fight and fled the scene after the shooting. FOX 2 Detroit
The shooting occurred at a Chipotle in Southfield, Michigan. FOX 2 Detroit

The gunman was tracked down at a nearby location shortly after the incident. It is not clear what charges he may face for the shooting.

Chipotle did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Kentucky dad Jesse Kipf faked his own death to avoid paying more than $100K in child support, faces lengthy jail time

A Kentucky father has admitted to faking his death to avoid paying his ex-wife more than $100,000 in outstanding child support and is facing serious jail time for the elaborate ruse.

Jesse Kipf, 38, pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated identity theft and one count of computer fraud in federal court on March 29, according to the plea agreement obtained by Law & Crime.

Kipf was incident by the United States Attorney’s Office in November after investigators with the FBI in Louisville, Kentucky, the Department of the Attorney General for Hawaii, and the Pulaski County Sheriff’s Office caught wind of his cyber crimes, according to a press release.


Jesse Kipf was charged with computer fraud stemming from the data breaches of GuestTek Interactive Entertainment in February 2023 and Milestone Inc. in June 2023. Grayson County (Ky.) Detention Center

Kipf admitted to completing a Hawaii Death Certificate Worksheet in Jan. 2023, where he created a fake death certificate for himself and “assigned himself as the medical certifier for the case and certified that case.”

Prosecutors argued that his motivation to commit the cyber crimes was fueled by his desire to avoid paying “his outstanding child support obligations to his ex-wife,” the plea agreement states.

The very-much-alive father then “infiltrated other states’ death registry systems” using stolen credentials, according to the plea agreement.

“He applied a digital signature for [the physician], providing his name, title, and license number. This resulted in the Defendant being registered as deceased in many government databases.”

However, his illegal online endeavors didn’t end with faking his death.

Kipf also used the credentials he stole to gain access to private business, government, and corporate networks with the goal of trying to sell the sensitive information he fraudulently obtained to other crooks online.

“In doing so, the Defendant caused damage to multiple computer networks and stole the identities of numerous individuals,” according to the plea agreement.

In January, Kipf was charged with computer fraud stemming from the data breaches of GuestTek Interactive Entertainment in February 2023 and Milestone Inc. in June 2023.

Authorities estimated the damages caused by Kipf for skipping out on his child support payments and gaining access to the networks exceeded more than $195,000, court documents show.

The computer-hacking father agreed to pay restitution of $3,500 to the state of Hawaii, $56,247 to Milestone Inc., $19,653 to GuestTek Interactive Entertainment, and $116,357 to the California child support agency, according to the plea deal.

He also agreed to forfeit his electronic devices and $16,218 in gold and silver coins.

Kipf was initially charged with five counts of computer fraud and three counts of aggravated identity theft, which carried a maximum of 30 years behind bars before many of those charges were dropped after he took the plea deal.

His sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 12 in federal court in Frankfort, Kentucky.

Kipf now faces a maximum of five years in federal prison for aggravated identity theft and a minimum of two years for computer fraud — both of which carry a steep fine of $250,000, according to the plea deal.

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No charges in Nex Benedict case following teen’s death: prosecutor

No criminal charges will be filed against anyone involved in the high school bathroom brawl with nonbinary teen Nex Benedict, who took their own life the following day, an Oklahoma prosecutor said.

Tulsa County District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler said in a statement Thursday he agreed with Owasso police investigators that the fight between Benedict and three girls was an “instance of mutual combat.”


Nex Benedict, who was nonbinary, died by suicide last month. AP

“When I review a report and make a decision to file a charge I must be convinced — as is every prosecutor — that a crime was committed and that I have reasonable belief that a judge or jury would be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime was committed,” Kunzweiler said.

“From all the evidence gathered, this fight was an instance of mutual combat.”

Speculation ran rampant over whether injuries Benedict suffered from the fight might have contributed to the sophomore’s death. But police said late last month the 16-year-old did not die as a result of trauma.

Kunzweiler also said that authorities found a “suicide note” that was written by Benedict, who went by they/them pronouns.

“An important part of the Owasso Police Department’s investigation was the discovery of some brief notes, written by Benedict, which appeared to be related to the suicide,” Kunzweiler said.

“The precise contents of the suicide note are a personal matter which the family will have to address within the privacy of their own lives.”

But the district attorney added the suicide note did not mention the bathroom fight or other difficulties at school, though Benedict had told family they were picked on at school for “various reasons,” according to the statement.


Benedict got into a fight with three girls the day before their death. AP

Kunzweiler said in the days leading up to the fight involving the two groups of students, both sides had been antagonizing each other. Benedict was sent to the hospital following the brawl, but was discharged the same day.

Benedict told a police officer from a hospital bed that the girls had been picking on them and their friends because of how they dressed and laughed. As a result, Benedict said they poured water on them leading to the fight.

The teen was found unresponsive by paramedics on Feb. 8 inside their home before dying at the hospital from what the medical examiner later said was an overdose of drugs.

The district attorney’s office noted both drugs used by Benedict were legally inside the home.

A lawyer representing Benedict’s family said he didn’t expect the family to comment on the district attorney’s statement.

The high-profile case of the student has led to sharp political divisions and a focus on school bullying, particularly against LGBT students.  

With Post wires

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 988 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

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61-year-old dies after dispute over NYC parking spot

A 61-year-old man died after a 30-year-old tow truck driver allegedly punched him in the face, causing him to fall back onto the pavement following a dispute over parking Saturday night in Brooklyn.

The deadly dispute broke out around 8:45 p.m. at a Shell gas station at 1143 Clarkson Avenue in Brownsville, according to officials.


A 61-year old man died after being punched in the face at a Shell gas station in Brooklyn CITIZEN

The man was punched in the face by a 30-year old tow truck driver. CITIZEN

The argument “became physical” and the tow truck driver punched the older man in the face, causing him to “fall and hit the pavement,” police said.

Emergency responders were called to the scene and brought the 61-year-old to Brookdale Hospital Medical Center. He was pronounced dead at 9:17 p.m., police said.

The tow truck driver was taken into custody at the scene and charges were pending, according to the NYPD.

Authorities have not released the identity of the victim.

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How China is flooding America with fentanyl on purpose to undermine our society

China already is waging war with the US, but not with guns — with poison. In his new book, “Blood Money,” Peter Schweizer explains how Communist China mass produces and distributes fentanyl, a chemical thirty to fifty times as powerful as heroin, to poison Americans. As this excerpt shows, the Chinese government actively uses fentanyl as a weapon to destabilize our society. 

“Blood Money,” discusses how China’s production of fentanyl can lead to the downfall of many Americans.

While we debate domestic politics to address the fentanyl crisis, the reality is that Beijing is deeply involved at every stage of the drug’s production and distribution in the United States. 

It’s little wonder that in 2019, some senior officials at the US Department of Homeland Security asked for fentanyl to be classified as a “weapon of mass destruction.”

How did the most dangerous drug ever created become a household word, and scourge, in America? 

Not by accident, but by deliberate design. Beijing’s hand can be found in every stage of the poison’s spread in North America. 

Based on leaked US national security documents, Mexican government hacked emails or correspondence, and Chinese corporate records, we know that the fentanyl operation is under Chinese control from start to finish, including: 

• Production of the basic chemicals needed to make it 

Most of the pharmaceutical ingredients needed to produce the synthetic cocktail known as fentanyl are produced in China. 

In the northern city of Shijiazhuang, west of Beijing, chemical companies churn out such ingredients. A highly militarized city boasting some eleven military facilities including several command schools, military hospitals, and medical facilities, it is also a government-designated national development zone. So the companies producing the fentanyl chemicals get tax credits. 

Some 40% of the production of this chemical comes from this city alone. Wuhan, now synonymous with COVID-19, is another big production center of fentanyl components.

Peter Schweizer explains how Communist China mass produces and distributes fentanyl, a chemical thirty to fifty times as powerful as heroin, to poison Americans.

• Creation of fentanyl and counterfeit pills in both Mexico and the United States

The Chinese triads began forging relationships with the Mexican drug cartels and quickly became business partners with them. The cartels started to mix fentanyl with their heroin. Fentanyl production proved to be so lucrative that “El Chapo,” the infamous head of the Sinaloa Cartel, quickly shifted from producing heroin and cocaine to fentanyl.

From the perspective of the Chinese triads and their allies in Beijing, routing the drugs through Mexico not only made logistical sense but also provided Beijing a measure of plausible deniability. The borrowed knife. The drugs were coming from Mexico, not China, right?

A similar operation, but on a smaller scale, occurred north of the border in Canada. Chinese triads established laboratories along the US border in British Columbia to produce fentanyl in Canada, smuggle it into the United States, and ship it abroad. 

Once the fentanyl is synthesized, it is pressed into pills to be smuggled across the border. The pills need to look like real prescription drugs. Who do you think provides the pill presses? 

In April 2020, the DOJ sent out an alert to law enforcement agencies with a blunt headline: “Chinese Pill Presses Are Key Components for Illegally Manufactured Fentanyl.” It noted how China smuggled pill presses into the US and Mexico, often claiming they were “machine parts.” 

Some senior officials at the US Department of Homeland Security asked for fentanyl to be classified as a “weapon of mass destruction.” New York Post

The DOJ noted the “relatively moderate pricing” of $1,000 per pill press — essentially at cost. Why are Chinese companies not charging a huge markup to sell the pill presses to the drug cartels? 

Chinese pill press manufacturers are required by US law to alert the DEA when they ship pill presses to the United States so federal authorities can track those who might be illegally producing drugs. But the Chinese companies simply ignore the law — with devastatingly lethal consequences in America. And Beijing does not punish them for doing so. 

Distribution of the deadly drug within the United States 

The Zheng drug syndicate, or cartel, operated a large fentanyl distribution ring in the American Midwest and bragged to drug dealers that it could openly “synthesize nearly any” narcotic, including fentanyl. In 2018, the DOJ indicted the cartel leadership in China. But despite arrest warrants, China allowed the cartel’s leaders to continue to live freely in Shanghai.

An important player in the Zheng drug syndicate was a Chinese Canadian scientist named Bin Wang. On the surface, Wang operated as a legitimate businessman out of a nondescript warehouse in Woburn, Massachusetts, just north of Boston. Wang sold chemicals to National Institutes of Health (NIH) research projects. 

But behind the legal facade, Wang was running a Zheng syndicate narcotics distribution hub. Wang’s companies received parcels from China with narcotics smuggled within bulk shipments of legitimate chemicals from Wang’s Chinese companies. The fentanyl and other drugs were then separated into individual parcels for his US distributors. 

Wang advised his employees to “heat seal” the fentanyl into “foil bags”; falsely label the parcels with the name of safe, legal chemicals; then ship them across the United States.

After the Zheng network was broken up by US law enforcement, Wang was indicted and charged with nearly a dozen crimes. He received a sentence of six years in prison.

Wang’s case exemplifies the symbiosis between drug cartel members and the Chinese government. While distributing fentanyl in the United States, Wang worked for Beijing to create a computerized platform to track chemical shipments worldwide, which meant flying to China monthly, in part to meet with Chinese government officials to discuss his progress.

Wang was also the head of the Nanjing University Alumni Association for the Boston area. Although the association sounds innocent enough, it functions as if it is a United Front group and uses its US-acquired knowledge to serve Beijing’s technological needs.

Once the fentanyl is synthesized, it is pressed into pills to be smuggled across the border. REUTERS

Operating out of the same Woburn, Massachusetts, warehouse was another organization with interesting government ties (and name) called the Chinese Antibody Society. According to court filings, this group, which had been launched, in the words of the Chinese government, “by China and for China,” also worked to collect intellectual property to be sent back to China. 

All this is to say that Wang was not your typical drug trafficker. Given his CCP connections, his drug trafficking could be seen as an extension of his duties to the state.

• Facilitation of drug cartel financial transactions, and even money laundering 

Drug cartels also need to launder their money. 

Some of the Mexican cartels’ most successful and proficient launderers are Chinese and use Chinese state banks to do their dirty work.

In the United States, Chinese nationals living across the United States from Virginia to Illinois to Oregon have been arrested in recent years for laundering money for drug cartels.

This pattern suggests a much larger system, especially considering the other established aspects of Chinese national alliance in the illicit drug trade. 

In May 2012, law enforcement officials received early indications of the drug supply network and the role of Chinese banks when they made moves in five states as part of Operation Dark Angel. 

They arrested 20 people, including the leader of a drug network based in Mexico. US federal agents noticed that he was, curiously, wiring cash overseas, including to “banks in China.” 

Chinese banks are highly regulated and controlled by the government. Yet in a leaked Department of Homeland Security (DHS) report obtained by the author, the cartels shifted to Chinese money laundering because of “their low fees” and “their ability to transfer monies rapidly to many regions in the world.”

In Oregon, officials found three Chinese citizens who had transferred millions of dollars of cartel money into more than 251 Chinese bank accounts while handling more than three hundred cash deliveries across the United States from Los Angeles to Boston.

Or consider the recent case of a Chinese American gangster named Xizhi Li, a successful money launderer who moved street money into large bank accounts that cartel leaders could convert into assets such as “yachts, mansions, weapons, technology and bribes to police and politicians.”

Li grew up in a Mexican border town before migrating to southern California and becoming an associate of the 14K triad. He fathered children with a Chinese woman but married a Mexican American woman, with whom he also had kids. 

He soon got into the drug business, smuggling cocaine out of Mexico. His approach to money laundering was simple and straightforward: a cartel would contract with him to launder some $350,000 — an amount that would fit comfortably into a suitcase. 

He didn’t use obscure banks to move the money around; rather, he used the most politically connected banks in China: the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and the Agricultural Bank of China, which are state controlled. 

Somehow the Chinese state didn’t seem to notice — or care. 

Wuhan, now synonymous with COVID-19, is another big production center of fentanyl components.

The quantity of money involved was enormous. Li had dozens of couriers operating from California to Georgia. In Chicago, two of his couriers handled more than $10 million over a seven-month period.

One method used to launder large sums of money is employing thousands of Chinese students on education visas in the United States to pick up suitcases of cash and then transfer them for money laundering, with the money then routed through WeChat and Chinese banks.

As one DEA official put it, “I can’t emphasize this enough, the involvement of the Chinese has really complicated all of these schemes.”

Admiral Craig Faller led the US Southern Command, which oversees all US military operations in Latin America, for three years. He testified before Congress in 2021 that Chinese money launderers are “the ‘No. 1 underwriter’ of drug trafficking in the Western Hemisphere.” 

• Facilitation of communications networks used by the cartels to operate without detection in the United States.

Mass production, distribution, and sales of fentanyl in the United States require a secure means of communication to circumvent surveillance by US law enforcement. 

Enter a Canadian company called Phantom Secure, which advertised a completely secure communication technology. A cartel favorite for years, Phantom Secure offered custom modified mobile devices such as BlackBerrys and smartphones, plus a service to delete all data in the event of a user’s arrest. 

According to federal authorities, “Phantom Secure’s devices were specifically designed, marketed and distributed for use by transnational criminal organizations, specifically those involved in drug trafficking.” 

Chinese nationals living across the United States from Virginia to Illinois to Oregon have been arrested in recent years for laundering money for drug cartels.

What made these devices especially secure was that the servers that stored client communications were in China-controlled Hong Kong or Panama. Phantom Secure chose those locations knowing that officials in neither country would cooperate with international law enforcement.

Eventually, in 2018, the FBI and its Canadian and Australian counterparts shut down Phantom Secure, arresting its senior executives for helping drug cartels. 

Chinese organized crime figures involved in the drug trade also speak openly on WeChat, a Chinese messaging app. WeChat is operated and owned by Tencent, a Chinese tech firm with close ties to the Chinese military and intelligence service. 

The Chinese government regularly monitors the app to suppress political dissent. But when it comes to drug trade chatter, it looks the other way. 

“It is all happening on WeChat,” said Thomas Cindric, a retired DEA agent from the elite Special Operations Division. “The Chinese government is clearly aware of it. The launderers are not concealing themselves on WeChat.”

In the mid-19th century, the British Empire used opium to destabilize China and win a trade war. The Chinese know their history, and have turned the tables. They are using fentanyl to undermine America and win the next global conflict.

Excerpted with permission from “Blood Money: Why the Powerful Turn a Blind Eye While China Kills Americans” by Peter Schweizer, out Tuesday from Harper.

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Israeli Embassy self-immolation: Man critically injured

A man is in critical condition after reportedly setting himself on fire outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC Sunday afternoon.

The DC Fire and EMS services were dispatched to the scene shortly before 1 p.m., a spokesperson confirmed to The Post.

By the time first responders arrived, the flames had already been extinguished by members of the US Secret Service, the fire service added.

The man was transported to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries.


The man was taken to a hospital with life-threatening injuries. @GLZRadio/Twitter

The Israeli Embassy did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for a comment on the incident.

No embassy staff were injured during the fire, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs said, according to GLZ Radio.

Fire trucks and other emergency vehicles – including hazmat crews – were subsequently spotted arriving at the scene to deal with a suspicious vehicle, freelance reporter Andrew Leyden shared on X.

The incident comes after months of political tensions over Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attack and Israel’s subsequent ground operations in the Gaza Strip.

Earlier on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the controversial assault on the southern city of Rafah, saying it “has to be done” for a “total victory.”

Rafah is now the most densely populated Gazan city after Palestinians in the north were forced to flee the Israeli military’s assault on the north.



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Victim assaulted by person of interest in Audrii Cunningham case wishes he ‘would have shot him’

A man once assaulted by Don McDougal, the person of interest in the disappearance of 11-year-old Texas girl Audrii Cunningham, says his “one regret” is not shooting him.

McDougal, a 42-year-old career criminal who has spent time behind bars for enticing a child, is the last person known to be with Audrii, who has not been seen since Thursday morning, authorities said.

McDougal, who is currently in the Polk County Jail on an unrelated charge, has an extensive rap sheet with several violent convictions, including one for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in 2010, Fox 26 reported.

Elic Bryan III, who was attacked by Don Steven McDougal, the person of interest in the disappearance of 11-year-old Audrii Cunningham, said he wishes he’d have shot the career criminal. KRIV

The victim in that case, Elic Bryan III, worked with McDougal at a local garage — and said he “seemed like an all right guy” until he turned violent one night after a few drinks.

“We threw him out of the house, and he came back with a knife, slashed tires, tried to stab me with the knife,” Bryan told Fox 26.

Law enforcement believes there is foul play involved in Audrii Cunningham’s disappearance.
Audrii Cunningham disappeared on Thursday. Family Handout

“I had to run him off with a gun and the cops finally came out with dogs and got him,” he said, calling the incident “terrifying.”

“​He seemed like a nice guy, but he’s got this whole other side to him that no one seemed to know about until now,” Bryan said.

“I wish I would have shot him, to be honest with you. That’s my one regret. Didn’t want to do it then because it would make you feel bad. But looking back, maybe I should have,” he told the outlet.

McDougal is a friend of the girl’s family and has been living behind their home in a trailer. KRIV

“With all the allegations against him, he’s not a nice guy, apparently. Something is wrong with him in the head,” Bryan said, adding that he can personally relate to what Audrii’s family is going through.

“I lost my daughter when she was seven to cancer. So, I know how it is and this right here is even worse because there’s no closure,” he said. “I hope she’s alive and well somewhere because losing a child is… like I said nothing compares to it.”

Audrii, father, grandmother and other relatives, vanished in what authorities believe involved foul play as they continue a desperate search for the girl.

McDougal, who is a friend of the girl’s family, has been living behind their home in a trailer, Polk County Sheriff Byron Lyons said Monday.

Don Steven McDouga KRIV

He left the house with her but hasn’t answered whether she ever reached the bus stop he was supposed to take her to, Lyons told reporters. 

“We do feel at this point that he was the last person who’s seen Audrii,” he said.

McDougal also served a prison sentence for enticing a child, a third-degree felony, more than a decade ago, KPRC reported.

He was initially indicted on a charge of attempted indecency with a child for allegedly attempting sexual contact with a girl in 2007 before he pleaded to the enticement charge in 2008 in another county.

McDougal did not have to register as a sex offender after that case, authorities said Monday.

Crime Stoppers has increased the reward for information leading to the recovery of Audrii to $10,000.

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