Department of Justice officials announced Thursday in Washington, DC that they had shut down notorious online Dark Web marketplace AlphaBay in conjunction with law enforcement across several countries.
Deputy Attorney General Rob Rosenstein said that Dutch authorities also shut down Hansa Market, another Tor-hidden underground drug market.
Acting Director of the FBI Andrew McCabe estimated that AlphaBay was “10 times the size of Silk Road.”
Federal officials confirmed the recent death of Alexandre Cazes, whom they said was the Thailand-based Canadian mastermind behind AlphaBay, and announced that civil forfeiture actions had also begun. That documents say that as of June 2017, AlphaBay had over 369,000 listings.
Authorities also distributed a criminal indictment against Cazes from the Eastern District of California on numerous conspiracy and drug trafficking charges.
“We took covert control of the Hansa Market a month ago and shut down AlphaBay during the same period. What this meant was that we could disrupt and then sweep up all those new users.” said Rob Wainwright, the director of Europol, who was on hand for the press conference.
He also announced a new Europol team that will “monitor Dark Net markets” but gave no further details.
Big pimpin’
The civil forfeiture complaint outlines a crucial operational security mistake that Cazes made when he began the site in 2014. When new users signed up, they received an e-mail from AlphaBay welcoming them to the site.
“The e-mail address of “pimp_alex_91@hotmail.com” was included in the header information of the AlphaBay welcome e-mail,” the court filing continues.
This e-mail address was also included in the header of AlphaBay users who lost their passwords.




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