SACRAMENTO - Elijah Richter, 28, of Camino, was sentenced Monday by U.S. District Judge Kimberly J. Mueller to 10 years in prison for distribution of a controlled substance known as n25i-nBOME that caused death, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced. According to court documents, during September 2012, Richter imported hallucinogenic drugs, including a controlled substance known as n25i-nBOME, from Europe to his residence in El Dorado County by placing orders on his computer through Silk Road, a now-defunct darknet website.
Through Silk Road, Richter was able to use bitcoin currency and an anonymous interface to execute drug deals. Shortly before Sept. 8, 2012, Richter imported a number of doses of n25i‑nBOME from Europe. Richter then distributed some of that n25i-nBOME to Jesse Roberts. Roberts, in turn, distributed some of that n25i-nBOME to a juvenile male who took four doses of the n25inBOME and died as a result of an overdose on the drug.