From the streets of Moscow to remote towns in Siberia, hand-to-hand buying of illegal drugs—as is the norm in most of the world—is on the wane. Instead, retail-size bags of drugs are secreted using spycraft by an army of young kladmen (stash men) who upload dead-drop locations, which are unlocked when customers make an online purchase.
"Everyone above the age of 14 in Russia knows about kladmen and dead drops," said a Russian lawyer specializing in the drug world.
There is even a how-to guide, the Kladman's Bible, which instructs couriers how to package and hide drugs while avoiding police and "seagulls"—specialist thieves.
Behind this new way of buying drugs, according to a report yesterday from the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-Toc), are a new breed of tech-savvy organized crime groups characterized by self-promotion and violence.
Against the backdrop of Russia's strict anti-drug regime and geopolitical isolation, a powerful darknet drug industry has developed. With lavish websites, Hollywood-quality promotional videos and audacious PR stunts on Moscow's streets, it now dominates the trade from production to sale—and is taking root outside Russia, from the battlefields of Ukraine to the streets of Tbilisi and Seoul.
At the bottom is a conveyor belt of poorly paid Russians looking for a financial shortcut amid low prospects and high inflation.
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