Crime & Safety

IE Man Involved In Dietary Supplement Smuggling Scheme Admits Guilt

The Jurupa Valley man pleaded guilty this week to his part in smuggling supplement ingredients to the US from China.

JURUPA VALLEY, CA —A Jurupa Valley man pleaded guilty Monday to his role in a long-running scheme to smuggle fraudulent dietary supplement ingredients into the United States from China.

Bao Luu, 47, of Mira Loma, entered his plea in Los Angeles to one federal count of "causing food to become misbranded while held for sale after the shipment of a component in interstate commerce," according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Sentencing was set for Jan. 22.

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An indictment filed in 2018 also charged Lynn Chau, 48, of Rosemead, and Pure Assay Ingredients Inc., Chau's import company located in City of Industry. Two Chinese citizens who worked for Pure Assay in Chengdu, China, were also charged.

According to the indictment, the defendants conspired to deceive the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspectors by falsely labeling designer steroids and stimulants as non-controversial substances.

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The indictment alleges that the defendants sold the smuggled substances to dietary supplement manufacturers in the United States for use in consumer products. In one instance, prosecutors say, Luu and Chau assembled a false shipment to fool FDA into believing that Pure Assay destroyed substances the agency blocked from distribution.

In reality, Pure Assay already had shipped out the real products and presented mislabeled substitutes for destruction, prosecutors said.

Chau and Pure Assay have a trial date set in March in Los Angeles federal court.