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Vincent Ramos ran a company called Phantom Secure that offered gutted, uncrackable smartphones. Photo: May Tse

Prison for Vancouver man Vincent Ramos who sold criminals uncrackable BlackBerry phones that used private Hong Kong network

  • Phones sold by Phantom Secure used servers in Panama and Hong Kong to stifle law enforcement from detecting users
  • Ramos’ clients included the Sinaloa drug cartel of Mexico and the Hells Angels in Australia
Crime

A Canadian man who sold encrypted BlackBerry smartphones to criminals worldwide that enabled them to sell drugs and even plan murders while avoiding the prying eyes of law enforcement was sentenced Tuesday to nine years in prison.

Vincent Ramos, 41, of Richmond in the Vancouver area was sentenced Tuesday in federal court in San Diego. He pleaded guilty last fall to one count of racketeering conspiracy.

Ramos also was told to forfeit US$80 million in earnings, which included homes, international bank account holdings, cryptocurrency and gold coins.

Ramos ran a company called Phantom Secure that offered gutted, uncrackable smartphones that, for a subscription, could send encrypted text messages through a secure network based in Panama and Hong Kong.

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The company also could wipe the phones remotely if they were seized.

Prosecutors said Ramos’ clients included the Sinaloa drug cartel of Mexico and a global drug-trafficking and illicit gambling organisation run by former University of Southern California football player Owen Hanson.

Hanson is serving a 21-year prison sentence.

Other clients were Hells Angels in Australia who used them to coordinate several killings, authorities said.

Phantom Secure’s clients included Hells Angels members in Australia. Photo: AFP

Ramos boasted about his wares after seeing a 2014 news report that said use of his encrypted devices by a suspect in one high-profile murder had hampered the investigation.

At least 7,000 of the phones were sold.

“The scope of this case is staggering,” Assistant US Attorney Andrew Young said, calling Ramos’ clients “some of the most sophisticated criminals in the world using some of the most sophisticated technology in the world”.

It was the first US conviction involving someone who provided encryption technology to criminal organisations.

Four of Ramos’ co-defendants remain at large.

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“I am sorry and accept responsibility for my actions that have led me here today,” Ramos told Judge William Hayes.

He said he turned “a blind eye” to the use of his phones – which were marketed as a tool for business executives – for international drug sales.

But prosecutors said Ramos set up his system intentionally to block interception of criminal communications by law enforcement.

The anonymous clients used nicknames that included “leadslinger, The.cartel, The.killa, Elchapo66 and Knee_capper9,” The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

In a 2018 text message, Ramos urged an employee to get a brand new Range Rover “cuz I just closed a lot of business. This week man. Sinaloa cartel, that’s what’s up.”

Ramos was arrested last year in Washington state and his secure communications network was dismantled.

Some 250 law enforcement agents from the US, Canada and Australia reportedly were involved in the investigation.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Canadian sentenced for selling Jail calls for seller of encrypted phones to top crime gangs
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