Facebook accused of ‘turning a blind eye’ to drug and gun dealing after 53 arrested following two year investigation
FACEBOOK is more like a "version of the dark web" than a social networking site, Chicago police officers say.
Cops arrested 53 people on Monday as part of "Operation FaceBOOKED", a two-year sting operation to infiltrate secret Facebook groups illegally selling guns and drugs, the reported.
"Facebook claims to monitor these groups but CPD detectives have labeled these private hidden sites a version of the dark web that is more accessible to everyday users," First Deputy Superintendent Anthony Riccio said at a press conference in Chicago on Tuesday.
Police recovered four handguns, two shotguns, and a high-powered rifle worth a total of $4,100 and 23 types of narcotics totaling $105,000.
Facebook agreed to remove groups flagged by police during the operation but won't block individual members due to member privacy, according to Riccio.
Operation FaceBOOKED began in December 2017, when police were tipped off by an informant that drugs and weapons were regularly sold in private Facebook groups.
These groups are hidden, making them invisible to anyone who isn't either already a member or personally invited in, according to Riccio.
Facebook's site says the purchase, sale or trade of firearms, ammunition and explosives between private users.
She noted that the website catches more than 97% of drug sale content and more than 93% of firearm sales content before it's reported.
Even though the social network in January 2016, users have found ways to flout the rules.
A 27-year-old man arrested in the sting operation on Monday was booked in a 2017 CPD operation of Facebook, Riccio said.
Rather than focus on user privacy, Interim Superintendent Charlie Beck said the social media juggernaut should be more concerned about safety.
"Another person's rights have to stop when the safety of another individual comes in jeopardy, and that's what laws are all about."