
Army pilot sold LSD hundreds of times on dark web, prosecutors say
An Army helicopter pilot who federal prosecutors say shipped nearly 1,800 orders of LSD to buyers on the 'dark web' argued in court Wednesday that he has a religious right to sell the drug, deploying an unconventional legal strategy in an attempt to stave off his indictment.
Kyle Norton Riester, a first lieutenant on active duty with the 12th Aviation Battalion at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, argued in legal papers this month that 'the Divine guidance and instruction he had received while communing with LSD' drove him to sell the hallucinogenic drug on dark-web marketplaces during the coronavirus pandemic.
'He felt compelled to dispense to co-religionists,' an attorney for Riester, George G. Lake, argued at a hearing in U.S. District Court in Alexandria. 'His religion still compels him,' Lake said Wednesday as Riester nodded along.
Federal prosecutors allege that the Black Hawk pilot, who has a security clearance, collected nearly $122,000 in LSD proceeds over an 11-month period. He shipped at least 1,797 orders from 2022 to 2024, they said, to buyers including a 15-year-old and an undercover law enforcement officer. Riester was indicted last year in a separate money-laundering case in Texas.
Details of a drug-trafficking investigation usually would not be made public before an indictment, but Riester filed a civil lawsuit claiming his LSD sales were a sincere religious exercise protected under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. A judge on Wednesday rejected those arguments, clearing a path for prosecutors to file drug-distribution charges.
Judge Anthony J. Trenga denied a request for a preliminary injunction to bar Riester's prosecution on religious grounds, finding that the government has a public health and safety interest in preventing the sale of controlled dangerous substances. Assuming Riester's spiritual beliefs were sincere, Trenga said, 'it's far from clear that that sincere religious belief would extend to the indiscriminate selling of LSD on the dark web.'
Trenga had already denied two previous requests to stop the prosecution, finding that 'Riester's admitted selling of LSD on the dark web cannot likely be deemed sufficiently narrow and restrictive to ensure that only individuals of Riester's same religion, rather than recreational users of LSD, were accessing the drug.'
Courts have found that the use of ayahuasca, peyote, marijuana or other psychoactive drugs in some cases is protected as a religious exercise when the trappings and rituals of organized worship are observed. The U.S. attorney's office for the Eastern District of Virginia said in a court filing that Riester 'did not sell LSD in the context of a religious gathering or ritual, or to people with whom he shared spiritual experiences; he sold LSD on the dark web, a forum designed to ensure the anonymity of its users.'
'He sold LSD on the dark web to anyone who was willing to pay,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Kirstin O'Connor said at the hearing Wednesday.
Riester remains on active-duty status after admitting in court documents that he consumed and sold LSD, and he continues to draw a paycheck, his attorney said. He is in dishonorable discharge proceedings and was granted pretrial release in the Texas money-laundering case, Lake said.
An Army spokesperson told The Washington Post that Riester's discharge is pending and that he had been reassigned to administrative duties and 'does not have access to classified material.'
The U.S. attorney's office declined to comment on the looming indictment. The prosecutor handling Riester's criminal case sat in the courtroom gallery for Wednesday's hearing.
Riester spent months collaborating with law enforcement officials after the FBI and other agencies searched his Springfield apartment in August. He was given an April 4 deadline to take a plea deal that could have landed him in prison for years, court records show. The arrangement would have required Riester to plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute LSD and one count of LSD distribution. Lake declined to comment after Wednesday's hearing.
Riester allegedly used the screen name 'FiveEyeGuys' on one dark-web marketplace called Abacus, court records show. It's unclear whether that was a reference to the Five Eyes, an intelligence-sharing alliance between Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States.
Also unclear is how Riester managed to hide his LSD religion, sales and income from his wife, a Black Hawk helicopter pilot in the same battalion who 'had no knowledge of and/or association with plaintiff's LSD-related religious activities,' according to Riester's sworn statements in his lawsuit. He denied flying helicopters while under the influence of LSD and acknowledged that his military service contract did not allow him to use controlled substances while on active duty.
Riester claimed that his prosecution could endanger U.S. national security, stating in a public court filing that he had 'provided copious amounts of assistance to the FBI and Secret Service in their attempts to arrest and prosecute extremely dangerous and violent international Bitcoin, human, and fentanyl traffickers.'
He also believes bitcoin is sacred because of 'the autonomy it gives visionary religious practitioners, such as himself' to facilitate the distribution of the 'Holy Sacrament' (LSD) to his spiritual fellows, Riester's attorneys said in a legal filing. His religion was not named in court documents or at Wednesday's hearing, but the attorneys said Riester had discussed his belief system at length in Substack posts and podcasts over the years.
In the money-laundering case, U.S. officials alleged Riester and unidentified co-conspirators used a spoof email address to fraudulently obtain a $285,000 wire transfer destined for a British company. Riester then converted the funds into cryptocurrency, according to the pending indictment in the Southern District of Texas. He has pleaded not guilty to those charges; that trial is scheduled to begin in July.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Army deletes video of DC parade tanks with 'Hang Fauci & Bill Gates' graffiti
A now-deleted Army video of tanks being loaded onto a train to Washington, D.C., to appear in the massive June 14 military parade for the Army's 250th anniversary showed a graffitied message spray-painted on the side of the train car – "Hang Fauci & Bill Gates." The video, posted to the Army's X account on Saturday, has since disappeared. It showed an M1A2 Abrams – a 70-ton battle tank – rolling onto a train car at Fort Cavazos in Texas. The death threat to Fauci and Gates – two people who have drawn the ire of President Donald Trump's MAGA base – was painted on a train car marked DODX, property of the Defense Department. Steve Warren, an Army spokesperson, said the Army has no plans to investigate. "We removed the post once notified of graffiti on the train that didn't align with Army values," he said. "We are excited to celebrate 250 years of service to the nation next week." Dr. Anthony Fauci, who led the government's response to COVID during Trump's first term, and Bill Gates, the billionaire Microsoft founder, are frequent targets of criticism from Republicans and Trump's supporters. Fauci has said he received a deluge of death threats and harassment since he became a magnet for right-wing outrage as the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases during the Pandemic, making him the public face of many pandemic social distancing policies and the COVID vaccine. Republicans have accused him of funding the Chinese government to create the virus and conservative firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said he "belongs in prison." "I still think deep down that there's a possibility that somebody's going to kill me," Fauci told USA TODAY in a 2024 interview. Former President Joe Biden issued a preemptive pardon for Fauci before he left office, anticipating that Trump would seek revenge against the doctor. Days into his second term, Trump pulled federal funding for Fauci's security detail. Gates, a Democratic Party donor who contributed millions to Kamala Harris' presidential campaign, also frequently pops up in some conspiracy theories. He has funded vaccination campaigns in poor countries, fueling online speculation that his vaccines contain microchips to track people. The tank in the video was one of 28 tanks and more than two dozen armored vehicles making the weeks-long, cross-country journey to appear in the Army's 250th anniversary parade in the nation's capital on June 14. The tanks and vehicles will be unloaded from the train cars on June 9 in Jessup, Maryland, and transported to downtown Washington by truck. More: Trump's getting his military parade. Here's what they look like from France to Russia The Army is also laying down steel plates on spots in the parade route where the tanks will turn to protect the roads and has said it will pay for any damage they sustain. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said on May 29 she is still "concerned" about road damage. The parade has faced scrutiny for conspicuously falling on President Donald Trump's birthday – also June 14. Trump pushed for a military parade during this first term but canceled his plans after pushback from Democrats and local politicians over the cost and logistics. This time around, the parade is estimated to cost as much as $40 million. Around 7,000 soldiers will also arrive in Washington for the occasion, which will also feature historic warplanes, helicopters, parachutists, and a bevy of events and entertainment. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Army scrubs vid of parade tank with 'Hang Fauci & Bill Gates' graffiti
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Approximately 60 people arrested following demonstrations on Capitol Hill, USCP says
The Brief Approximately 60 protesters were arrested after breaking through barriers at the Capitol on Friday. The demonstration comes on the eve of the Army's 250th Birthday Parade. USCP says they will be charged with unlawful demonstration and crossing a police line. WASHINGTON - U.S. Capitol Police arrested at least 60 demonstrators near Capitol Hill Friday night. The protests come on the eve of the Army's 250th Birthday Parade, which also falls on the 79th birthday of President Donald Trump. What we know Capitol Police arrested 60 people after an evening protest. They say some demonstrators made it onto the Capitol steps, and some pressed past a barricade on the East Plaza and ran onto the Capitol steps on the East Front. What they're saying USCP provided a statement to FOX 5. Read it in full below: "The USCP was aware of a peaceful demonstration at the Supreme Court this evening with approximately 75 people. A short time later, at around 7 p.m., approximately 60 people from the group left the Supreme Court so as a precaution, our officers began establishing a perimeter. A few people pushed the bike rack down and illegally crossed the police line while running towards the Rotunda Steps. Our officers immediately blocked the group and began making arrests. USCP is in the process of arresting approximately 60 demonstrators. All will be charged with unlawful demonstration and crossing a police line. Additional charges for some will include assault on a police officer and resisting arrest. Two arrestees were taken to a local hospital for further treatment."
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Police arrest around 60 protestors at the Capitol
WASHINGTON (DC News Now) — The U.S. Capitol Police (USCP) arrested around 60 people after a protest at the Supreme Court on Friday. The protest took place one day before the Army's 250th birthday parade and festival, which coincides with President Donald Trump's birthday. Tourists excited for Army's 250th anniversary parade, celebrations USCP said that the demonstration started as a peaceful one, with around 75 people participating. Around 60 people left that location, so officers started to establish a perimeter as a precaution. 'A few people pushed the bike rack down and illegally crossed the police line while running towards the Rotunda Steps. Our officers immediately blocked the group and began making arrests,' USCP said in a statement. Everyone who was arrested will face charges of unlawful demonstration and crossing a police line. Some individuals will also be charged with assault on a police officer and resisting arrest. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.