Posted by Anthony Roberts on December 22, 2010
Brian Wainstein named in connection with Cyprus busts
The Cyprus-based newspaper that broke the original story of the biggest international steroid bust ever, has followed it up with one that officially names Axio Labs/ GenXXL owner Brian Wainstein.
More arrests are being made daily, and at this point, it appears that everyone???s cards are on the table: international law enforcement are aware of, and actively trying to capture, the owner of Axio Labs, Brian Wainstein. And he is being outed in the media as an international fugitive with multiple arrest warrants on him.
The article itself (screenshotted below) doesn???t exactly bridge the gap between Wainstein and the recent busts, but what I think the reporter is doing, is getting the piece out there, with the right names in it, without necessarily outing any inside information that???s been gathered (otherwise, the article is slightly nonsensical).
For anyone familiar with the media, this article reads like the kind of thing we see when someone (*the journalist) is protecting a source ??? which is what the journalist is clearly doing by not outing the police spokeswoman who is quoted in the opening line.
So now it???s just a game, with both sides taking bets on how long can Brian Wainstein avoid being picked up by Interpol, the DEA, or any one of a number of international law enforcement agencies that have targeted him and his operation. In this type of game, as in most, the longer you play, the greater the odds are that the house is going to win. And in this case, the house is catching up to Wainstein every day, if they haven???t captured him by the time you???re reading this.
But once again, I???d stress that even while he was in an Irish prison, his business remained in operation, and while his employees like Glenn England are on probation, they continue to traffic steroids.
So I???d advise everybody to wait and see how this turns out, because in the past, this has been one of those cases where law enforcement has been able to make a lot of arrests, and seize a lot of steroids, but still have nothing to show for it.


Brian Wainstein named in connection with Cyprus busts
The Cyprus-based newspaper that broke the original story of the biggest international steroid bust ever, has followed it up with one that officially names Axio Labs/ GenXXL owner Brian Wainstein.
More arrests are being made daily, and at this point, it appears that everyone???s cards are on the table: international law enforcement are aware of, and actively trying to capture, the owner of Axio Labs, Brian Wainstein. And he is being outed in the media as an international fugitive with multiple arrest warrants on him.
The article itself (screenshotted below) doesn???t exactly bridge the gap between Wainstein and the recent busts, but what I think the reporter is doing, is getting the piece out there, with the right names in it, without necessarily outing any inside information that???s been gathered (otherwise, the article is slightly nonsensical).
For anyone familiar with the media, this article reads like the kind of thing we see when someone (*the journalist) is protecting a source ??? which is what the journalist is clearly doing by not outing the police spokeswoman who is quoted in the opening line.
So now it???s just a game, with both sides taking bets on how long can Brian Wainstein avoid being picked up by Interpol, the DEA, or any one of a number of international law enforcement agencies that have targeted him and his operation. In this type of game, as in most, the longer you play, the greater the odds are that the house is going to win. And in this case, the house is catching up to Wainstein every day, if they haven???t captured him by the time you???re reading this.
But once again, I???d stress that even while he was in an Irish prison, his business remained in operation, and while his employees like Glenn England are on probation, they continue to traffic steroids.
So I???d advise everybody to wait and see how this turns out, because in the past, this has been one of those cases where law enforcement has been able to make a lot of arrests, and seize a lot of steroids, but still have nothing to show for it.
