Twelve Defendants Arrested as Part of Illegal Pesticide Ring

Twelve people were charged yesterday with illegally distributing and selling unregistered and misbranded pesticides from multiple locations in Manhattan.

Prosecutors charged two of the 12, Chen Yah Huang and Jai Ping Chen, with federal crimes, and the remaining ten were charged under state statutes.

The pesticides were particularly dangerous because their packaging and appearance could lead them to be mistaken for cookies or cough medicine. The pesticides were not registered by EPA and were missing required label warnings, so consumers had no way of knowing how dangerous the products were or how best to protect themselves from harmful exposure. In fact, one woman accidentally ingested one of the pesticides, believing it to be medicine, and was hospitalized as a result.

"The sale of unregistered chemical products is illegal and puts people's health, particularly young children, at risk,” said Cynthia Giles, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. “Last week's 12 arrests, inspections, and outreach to the local community about the dangers of unregistered pest control chemicals, will help keep our neighborhoods safe and illegal products off the streets."

In addition to the 12 arrests, pursuant to court-ordered search warrants, federal and state law enforcement agents searched 14 locations and seized more than 6,000 packages of pesticides containing high levels of toxic chemicals that were not approved for commercial sale in the United States. Also, as part of a coordinated citywide inspection of 47 businesses in various neighborhoods in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens, EPA and DEC civil inspectors seized 350 additional unregistered pesticide products, of 16 different varieties, many with high levels of toxicity.

According to the complaints unsealed Wednesday in Manhattan federal court, in December 2010, an individual became gravely ill after ingesting a pesticide she mistook for medicine. Later investigation revealed that the pesticide, a small vial of blue-green liquid labeled primarily in Chinese with the words "The Cat Be Unemployed," was being sold illegally in the Chinatown section of Manhattan. The pesticide was not registered by the EPA nor was it properly labeled, as required by both state and federal law. The investigation further revealed that the product contained almost 61 times the amount of brodifacoum -- a rodenticide -– than is allowed by the EPA.

Additionally, brodifacoum is not approved for direct consumer use; it may only be used by licensed professionals. In response to the poisoning, various law enforcement agencies began a joint undercover investigation of the illegal sale of toxic pesticides in and around New York City. The multi-agency criminal investigation revealed at least a dozen unregistered and misbranded pesticide products, some with extremely high levels of toxicity, being sold by more than a dozen vendors in and around Manhattan's Chinatown.

Two federal complaints unsealed last week allege that Chen Yan Huang and Jai Ping Chen distributed and sold more than 4,600 individual packages of unregistered and misbranded pesticide products to undercover agents on multiple occasions between May and August 2011. Many of the pesticide packages they sold misrepresented the amount of the chemical the pesticide contained, none contained the required ingredient statement, and none had been approved by the EPA for commercial sale. Huang owns a store in the Chinatown area of Manhattan that illegally sold the pesticides, some of which were kept concealed from public view, others of which were displayed on the counter.

During one meeting, Huang told undercover agents he could provide as many packages of pesticides as they wanted. During a search of Huang's store Sept. 14 gents found more than 800 packages of unregistered pesticides. Chen, a delivery driver, made multiple deliveries of pesticides to at least two locations in Manhattan, including Huang's store. Agents also found thousands of packages of pesticides in Chen's home Sept. 14.

The operation involved purchases of the following dangerous chemicals:

  • Bromadiolone and Brofidacoum, both "restricted use" chemicals, which are active ingredients in rodenticides, or pesticides used to kill rodents. They are both highly toxic and are therefore not approved for use by the general public, nor may they be in products intended for consumer or urban use.
  • Sodium Fluoroacetate, also highly toxic, "restricted use" chemical. It is only approved for use to protect livestock from coyotes and can be used by only a licensed professional; and
  • Fipronil, an active ingredient in insecticides. The products sold to undercover agents had significantly higher levels of Fipronil than allowed by EPA.

The products provided to undercover agents by Huang and Chen contained high levels of Brofidacoum and Fipronil, and were sold under various names, including "Fuzhou Control Termite Company -- Cockroachkiller Bait" and "Mie Zhang Qing." Attached to the federal complaint are photographs of the pesticide products purchased at Huang's store, as well a chart summarizing the results of scientific analysis of the products.

Chen, 43, of Flushing, N.Y., is charged with two counts of distributing unregistered pesticides, two counts of distributing misbranded pesticides and one count of conspiracy to violate the federal laws regulating the distribution and sale of pesticides. Each count carries a maximum sentence of one year and a maximum fine of $25,000.

Huang, 56, of New York City, is charged with four counts of distributing unregistered pesticides, four counts of distributing misbranded pesticides, and one count of conspiracy to violate the federal laws regulating the distribution and sale of pesticides. Each count carries a maximum sentence of one year and a maximum fine of $25,000.

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