Crime
Civil Forfeiture Case Reveals B.C. Fentanyl Network Tied to Chinese Precursor Shift

Drug lab at Seux Road near Mission, BC
Seizures included significant amounts of 4-Piperidone — a key upstream fentanyl precursor that Chinese suppliers adopted after U.S. restrictions on NPP and ANPP
A new civil forfeiture case in British Columbia has surfaced extraordinary details about a clandestine fentanyl production network that investigators say operated with academic-level expertise, imported laboratory equipment from overseas, and, significantly, relied predominantly on 4-Piperidone, a precursor chemical that Chinese suppliers moved to after the U.S. government cracked down on previous analogs.
The Bureau’s analysis of the filing and information from expert sources suggests the network is consistent with the hybrid model now driving the global fentanyl trade: Chinese Communist Party–linked chemical suppliers, Mexican cartel distributors, and Iranian transnational networks partnering with Canadian gangs, notably the Wolfpack Alliance, to embed industrial-scale production inside British Columbia.
In a case first reported by the Vancouver Sun, filed August 13 in B.C. Supreme Court, the Director of Civil Forfeiture seeks to seize three properties in Langley and Aldergrove, three vehicles, and $1,860 in cash linked to the alleged operation.
The filing names Cesar Douglas Escobar-Calderon, Harpal Singh Gill, Michaela Marie Butler Christensen also known as Michaela Marie Gill, and One Oak Construction Ltd. as defendants. Investigators allege Gill purchased large volumes of fentanyl precursors under a fictitious company name, and ordered professional laboratory equipment from overseas to outfit clandestine labs. Equipment and chemicals were distributed through a network of suburban properties, including Pitt Meadows, Mission, Aldergrove, and Langley.
While the filing does not name the overseas jurisdiction where Gill allegedly sourced high-grade laboratory equipment and fentanyl precursors, prior U.S. sanctions cases focused on British Columbia indicate China is almost certainly the origin, consistent with wider patterns documented in the global fentanyl trade.
Court documents show RCMP arrested Escobar-Calderon at a Pitt Meadows site alongside 359 grams of fentanyl, large volumes of precursors including pyridine, propanoyl chloride, and aniline, and laboratory equipment contaminated by residues.
But the most significant seizure came at a property on Seux Road in Mission, a mountainous northern pocket of the Fraser Valley outside Greater Vancouver. The site resembled a smaller version of the so-called superlab dismantled in Falkland, B.C., and appeared to function as the network’s largest production node. Here police found a fully equipped clandestine laboratory, commercial-sized synthesis equipment, and vast stores of chemicals. The haul included more than 2,000 grams of MDMA and approximately five kilograms of fentanyl. Large volumes of precursor chemicals were also seized, including pyridine, propanoyl chloride, aniline, and 4-Piperidone — compounds central to industrial fentanyl synthesis.
After the U.S. government placed strict controls on fentanyl precursors NPP and ANPP, Chinese suppliers shifted toward 4-Piperidone as the primary replacement. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has since designated 4-Piperidone as a List I chemical, describing it as a crucial precursor for fentanyl that cannot be substituted in the main synthesis routes. Both U.S. and UN authorities note that restrictions on downstream precursors have driven traffickers to exploit this earlier-stage chemical.
Linked Langley addresses yielded manuals on drug synthesis, 8.3 grams of MDMA, laboratory equipment, handwritten notes, and $1,600 in cash found in a safe. At an Aldergrove home, officers seized commercial-scale equipment contaminated with fentanyl precursors. Officers also seized a Dodge Ram, a Chevrolet Tahoe, and a Snake River dump trailer allegedly used to store and transport chemicals.
Inside the Dodge Ram, which investigators linked to Escobar-Calderon, police found approximately one kilogram of 4-Piperidone. Investigators also recovered handwritten notes on illicit synthesis and keys that showed interconnections between the labs and the suspects.
The filing argues the properties, vehicles, and money are proceeds and instruments of unlawful activity, citing not only drug production but also laundering of criminal proceeds and failure to declare taxable income.
The forfeiture claim adds detail to a case first unveiled in March, when RCMP announced coordinated raids and described “academic and professional research-grade” labs outfitted for mass production. At a Vancouver press conference, Cpl. Arash Seyed said the bust had prevented millions of potentially lethal doses from reaching the streets, calling it evidence of “progressively enhanced scientific and technical expertise among transnational organized crime groups.”
“The fentanyl production labs located in the cities of Pitt Meadows, Mission, and Aldergrove were equipped with specialized chemical processing equipment often found in academic and professional research facilities,” the RCMP said, “with one of the arrested individuals claiming to be a chemist with an advanced degree in organic chemistry.”
But Canadian officials also sought to reassure Washington.
“There continues to be no evidence, in this case and others, that these labs are producing fentanyl for exportation into the United States,” said Assistant Commissioner David Teboul. That assurance has been challenged. A U.S. government source told The Bureau there is no clarity on how the RCMP determined that assertion, noting Canada’s own data shows it has emerged as a global fentanyl exporter, and that the volume of fentanyl precursors flooding into Vancouver’s port far exceeds the needs of Canada’s domestic market. The presence of apparently Chinese-sourced precursors, overseas lab equipment, and commercial-scale output suggests the network was positioned for broader distribution.
The Bureau’s assessment is that the network revealed in the forfeiture case fits a wider pattern. Chinese brokers, operating with tacit state oversight, dominate the supply of fentanyl precursors such as 4-Piperidone. Mexican cartels — particularly Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation — run production and export chains into North America. Iranian-linked transnational operators have been documented in connection to a number of facets of cartel distribution and broader intelligence activity that draws in Canadian-based gangsters involved in the fentanyl networks. In Canada, the Wolfpack Alliance has provided the connective tissue, bridging domestic gangs to Mexican cartels and global suppliers. The B.C. network appears to embody that model.
The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.
To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Crime
‘We’re Taking It Back’: Trump Deploying National Guard To Streets Of Nation’s Capital

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
President Donald Trump announced on Monday that he is deploying the National Guard to combat violent crime in Washington, D.C.
Trump had previously hinted at both a federal takeover of D.C. and the deployment of the National Guard to combat the slew of violent crimes that have occurred in recent months.
“This is Liberation Day in D.C. and we’re gonna take our capital back. We’re taking it back. Under the authorities vested in me as the President of the United States, I’m officially invoking Section 40 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act and placing the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department under federal control,” Trump said.
Dear Readers:
As a nonprofit, we are dependent on the generosity of our readers.
Please consider making a small donation of any amount here.
Thank you!
“In addition, I’m deploying the National Guard to help reestablish law and order and safety in Washington, D.C. and they’re gonna be allowed to do their job properly,” the president continued.
High profile case of violent crime have recently swept across the nation’s capital, particularly among the district’s youth. Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffer Edward Coristine, also known as “Big Balls,” intervened in a carjacking of a woman at around 3 a.m. on August 5 and got severely beaten by the suspects.
In response to the attack on Coristine, Trump increased the presence of federal law enforcement in D.C. by having the FBI, DEA and Homeland Security coordinate with the DC Metropolitan Police. The president wrote in a Truth Social post on Saturday that D.C. had become “one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the World,” but promised it would “soon be one of the safest.”
“On Monday a Press Conference will be held at the White House which will, essentially, stop violent crime in Washington, D.C. It has become one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the World. It will soon be one of the safest!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter,” Trump said.
Prior to that incident, two Israeli Embassy staffers were fatally shot outside of the Capital Jewish Museum on May 22 by 31-year-old Elias Rodriguez. The suspect has been additionally charged as of Thursday with two federal counts of first-degree murder under the D.C. criminal code and with two counts of hate crime that carry a maximum sentence of death or life imprisonment, the Department of Justice (DOJ) reported in a press release.
A gang-related shooting on June 30 killed 21-year-old congressional intern Eric Tarpinian-Jachym near a Metro station after the suspects emerged from their vehicle and opened fire on a crowd of people.
U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Jeanine Pirro stated on Thursday that her hands are tied when it comes to prosecuting violent suspects in the district. She said that a 19-year-old was only sentenced to probation after shooting a person in the chest, which she characterized as being unacceptable.
“The sentence was probation. We can’t have that,” Pirro said. “And by the way, he wasn’t a kid. He was 19. These are the rules of D.C. Council. They’ve got to be changed. We got to have the ability to let people know that they’re gonna be accountable.”
Though violent crime has dropped 26% in comparison to 2024, a total of 99 homicides have thus far occurred in D.C. in 2025, according to the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) tracker. The homicide rate has trended higher in comparison to the last decade, according to Axios.
Crime
Trump Calls For DC Homeless To Be Moved ‘FAR From The Capital’

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
President Donald Trump said that homeless people will have places to stay “FAR from the Capital” and pledged that violent criminals in Washington, D.C., will be prosecuted aggressively in a pair of Sunday posts on Truth Social.
Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffer Edward Coristine, known by the moniker “Big Balls,” was severely injured when he intervened to prevent a carjacking in the District of Columbia. The president directed a massive increase in the federal law enforcement presence in Washington on Thursday.
Dear Readers:
As a nonprofit, we are dependent on the generosity of our readers.
Please consider making a small donation of any amount here.
Thank you!
“ I’m going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before. The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY,” Trump posted on Truth Social. “We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital. The Criminals, you don’t have to move out. We’re going to put you in jail where you belong. It’s all going to happen very fast, just like the Border. We went from millions pouring in, to ZERO in the last few months. This will be easier — Be prepared! There will be no ‘MR. NICE GUY.’ We want our Capital BACK.”
Crime in the District of Columbia became a hot-button issue after Eric Tarpinian-Jachym, an intern for Republican Rep. Ron Estes of Kansas, was fatally shot June 30. Two employees of the Israeli Embassy were killed in a May shooting, while Democratic Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota was assaulted in her apartment in February 2023.
Crime and ‘Beautification’ will not only involve ending the Crime, Murder, and Death in our Nation’s Capital, but will also be about Cleanliness and the General Physical Renovation and Condition of our once beautiful and well maintained Capital,” Trump posted. “We are not going to allow people to spend $3.1 Billion Dollars on fixing up a building, like the Federal Reserve, which could have been done in a far more elegant and time sensitive manner for $50 to $100 Million Dollars. The Renovation would have actually been better, and we would have saved $3 Billion Dollars, Traffic Jams, and never-ending Construction.”
“The Mayor of D.C., Muriel Bowser, is a good person who has tried, but she has been given many chances, and the Crime Numbers get worse, and the City only gets dirtier and less attractive,” Trump continued. “The American Public is not going to put up with it any longer. Just like I took care of the Border, where you had ZERO Illegals coming across last month, from millions the year before, I will take care of our cherished Capital, and we will make it, truly, GREAT AGAIN! Before the tents, squalor, filth, and Crime, it was the most beautiful Capital in the World. It will soon be that again.”
According to Article I of the Constitution, Congress can exercise control over the nation’s capital. Congress granted the District of Columbia “home rule” in 1973, but Congress can disapprove legislation passed by the D.C. government.
-
COVID-192 days ago
Agencies ordered to delete worker COVID vaccine records
-
Alberta1 day ago
India and Spain are buying Canadian oil…from the U.S.
-
Business1 day ago
Canada’s new pipeline opens a direct oil route to India, offering a sanctions-proof rival to Russian crude.
-
Business1 day ago
Canada’s great PONI race – projects of national interest
-
Bruce Dowbiggin2 days ago
Golf’s Best 2025 Moment Is A Film That Endlessly Mocks The Game
-
Business2 days ago
Canadians are fed up with grocers maple‑washing their food
-
Daily Caller2 days ago
US Judge Deals Devastating Blow to Climate Lawfare Campaign against Oil and Gas Producers
-
Alberta1 day ago
Albertans simply want a fair shake in the federation