Prosecutors charge man with selling suicide drug after some buyers found
dead
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[May 31, 2024]
(The Center Square) – A federal grand jury indicted a
Mexican man on drug charges for allegedly illegally importing the drug
pentobarbital into the United States from Mexico for use in committing
suicide – in some cases, authorities found the people who had bought the
drug were dead.
Pentobarbital is a short-acting barbiturate rarely used outside of
hospitals. The drug is used in animal euthanasia, assisted suicide and
some U.S. executions.
Chicago-based prosecutors charged Daniel Gonzalez-Munguia, also known as
"Alejandro Vasquez," 40, of Puebla, Mexico, with importing and
distributing a controlled substance. If convicted, he could face up to
60 years in federal prison.
Gonzalez-Munguia is in U.S. custody, but an arraignment date in federal
court in Chicago has not yet been scheduled.
Homeland Security Investigations had been looking into the smuggling of
suicide drugs since March 2016 after finding pentobarbital in an
intercepted package from Mexico that contained two pre-packaged, 100
milliliter medicine bottles, each labelled as "pentobarbital sodium"
sold under the trade name "Pisabental." Pentobarbital is sold
commercially in Mexico for euthanizing animals. The intercepted package,
which also contained the anti-nausea medicine metoclopramide, was headed
to a hotel in Libertyville, Illinois, about 50 miles from Chicago.
Agents tracked down the man in the hotel room. He told agents he was
depressed after his wife told him she wanted to divorce and police
served him with an order of protection from his wife. He said that he
had ordered a suicide manual online. The man, who was not identified in
the indictment, told agents he no longer wanted to commit suicide. The
suicide manual contained a Yahoo! email address for a person who could
provide drugs for suicide. The man at the hotel, a licensed pharmacist,
had emailed the Yahoo! address seeking pentobarbital. He eventually
wired $644 to Mexico for two bottles of pentobarbital, according to the
indictment.
Investigators later linked the Yahoo! address to Gonzalez-Munguia.
In one email exchange with the Yahoo! address, the despondent man in the
hotel was told the amount was "enough to reliably get a peaceful exit
for two people."
Another email was more specific: "The product is drinkable, not
injectable despite it says injectable in the bottle, remember that this
product is made for animals mainly. Take 2 pills each 12 hours before
the day you are planning to drink the product, then 2 more pills half
hour before, mix the content in orange juice or even an alcoholic drink
and drink all at once. The effect takes 20 minutes to 30 minutes and you
will feel sleepy, this is the only effect you will feel in your body.
Please erase all emails between you and me and dispose the bottles at a
safe place."
Prosecutors said Gonzalez-Munguia operated an online business to sell
pentobarbital to people in the U.S. and throughout the world who were
contemplating suicide.
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The Everett McKinley Dirksen United States Courthouse in Chicago on
Tuesday, April 5, 2023.
By Brett Rowland | The Center Square
During the investigation, law enforcement located mail parcels that
appear to have been shipped out of Mexico by Gonzalez-Munguia.
Authorities in the U.S. and several foreign countries conducted
well-being checks and recovered pentobarbital from people who admitted
to being despondent and ordering the suicide drug online from email
addresses operated by Gonzalez-Munguia, according to the indictment and
a criminal complaint previously filed in the case. Law enforcement
offered assistance to those people. In other instances, people who
bought pentobarbital via the email addresses were found dead, including
people in the Chicago area and several other states and countries,
according to the indictment.
A 29-year-old from California who paid $700 for three bottles of
pentobarbital was later found dead in a hotel room in La Mesa,
California, in April 2016. The cause of death remains under
investigation, according to the indictment. However, a search recovered
a handwritten note bearing the name "Daniel Gonzalez-Munguia" and a
blank Western Union form.
A 52-year-old from Boulder, Colorado, who paid $720 for three bottles,
was found dead in 2015. The Boulder County Coroner's Office ruled the
person had committed suicide and found the cause of death to be an
overdose of pentobarbital, according to the indictment.
Undercover agents later bought pentobarbital directly from Gonzalez-Munguia.
Pentobarbital is a Schedule II drug in the U.S. It has turned up other
drug smuggling activities and is sometimes marketed as illicit drugs
such as fentanyl. In 2021, the American Veterinary Medical Association
reported a shortage of pentobarbital in 2021, advising members about
alternatives at the time. The drug has also been used in executions.
Most U.S. executions previously relied on a three-drug cocktail for
executions, but when those drugs became difficult to obtain, several
states switched to a single drug: Pentobarbital. When former U.S.
Attorney General William Barr brought back the death penalty in 2019,
the plan was for the Federal Bureau of Prisons to use pentobarbital,
according to The BMJ, a medical journal and federal records.
Authorities have found pentobarbital in other smuggling operations. In
2019, a U.S. Coast Guard team boarded a boat off the coast of Oregon and
found 28 seven-gallon jugs containing liquid methamphetamine along with
plastic-wrapped bricks of pentobarbital, according to court records and
Coast Guard reports.
Earlier this year, DEA agents found 11 pounds of pentobarbital they
busted a cartel-linked illicit drug operation in Texas. In that case,
the dealers marketed the short-acting barbiturate pentobarbital as
heroin, according to a DEA spokesperson. Agents seized other more common
illicit drugs in larger quantities during the multi-year investigation.
Among them: 1,212 pounds of meth, 548 pounds of cocaine, 74 pounds of
heroin, and 22,600 fentanyl-laced pills. The spokesperson said the
seizure of pentobarbital was "uncommon."
The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 by phone and online.
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