A graduate student from India, who organised an illegal internet pharmacy network, has been sentenced to 30 years in prison. |
Akhil Bansal, 29, a doctor studying for a business degree at Temple University, ran a network with his family that smuggled 11 million prescription pills from India and distributed them to 60,000 Americans, prosecutors said. |
"You distributed poison throughout the country," US District Judge Paul Diamond told Bansal in court yesterday. Bansal maintained his innocence. |
"Truly in my heart, I believe I did not commit these serious charges," he said. He said he plans an appeal. |
The family operated a wholesale pharmacy network, supplying dozens of illegal online pharmacies, offering Viagra, sedatives and painkillers without a prescription, prosecutors said. The Bansals shipped as many as 75,000 pills a day from a New York safe house, reaping about $8 million, they said. |
Bansal faced a 20-year minimum mandatory sentence and a guideline range of 30 years to life. |
Most of the others charged struck plea deals and received sentences of less than three years. |