DEA
Investigation
Nets
International
Arms
Dealer
With
Ties
To Terrorist
Organizations
Defendant’s “global
munitions
empire” included
deals
with
factions
in
Iraq,
Bosnia,
Somalia, Nicaragua,
Brazil,
Cyprus,
Bosnia,
Croatia,
and
Iran
JUN
8 --
(NEW
YORK) – DEA
Administrator
Karen
P. Tandy
and
Michael
J. Garcia,
the
United
States
Attorney
for
the
Southern
District
of New
York
announced
today
the
arrest
of Monzer
al Kassar,
a/k/a “Abu
Munawar,” a/k/a “El
Taous,” an
international
arms
dealer
charged
with
conspiring
to sell
millions
of dollars
worth
of weapons
to the
Fuerzas
Armadas
Revolucionarias
de Colombia
(FARC)
-- a
designated
foreign
terrorist
organization
-- to
be used
to kill
Americans
in Colombia.
|
|
FARC
mobilization in an undated photo.
|
Defendants
believed they were selling weapons
to members of the FARC (pictured
above). |
Kassar,
along
with co-defendants
Tareq
Mousa
al Ghazi
and Luis
Felipe
Moreno-Godoy
were arrested
yesterday
as they
prepared
to finalize
the multimillion-dollar
transaction
to pay
for the
weapons.
Kassar
was arrested
on the
U.S. charges
by Spanish
authorities
in Madrid;
simultaneously
Ghazi
and Moreno-Godoy
were arrested
in Romania.
"Monzer
al Kassar
commands
a global
munitions
empire,
arming
and funding
insurgents
and terrorists
across
the globe,
particularly
those
who wish
to harm
Americans," said
DEA Administrator
Karen
P. Tandy. "He
operates
in the
shadows,
the silent
partner
behind
the business
of death
and terror.
Kassar's
capture
is a testament
to DEA's
unique
investigative
skills
and broad
reach
of its
international
intelligence
network."
|
Kassar's
estate in Marbella, Spain. |
According
to the
Indictment
unsealed
yesterday
in Manhattan
federal
court:
Since
the early
1970s,
Kassar,
an international
weapons
trafficker,
has been
a ready
source
of weapons
and military
equipment
for armed
factions
engaged
in violent
conflicts
around
the world.
Kassar
has provided
weapons
and military
equipment
to such
factions
in Nicaragua,
Brazil,
Cyprus,
Bosnia,
Croatia,
Somalia,
Iran,
and Iraq,
among
other
countries.
Some of
these
factions
have included
known
terrorist
organizations,
such as
the Palestinian
Liberation
Front
(PLF),
the goals
of which
included
attacking
United
States
interests
and United
States
nationals.
To carry
out his
weapons-trafficking
business,
Kassar
developed
an international
network
of criminal
associates,
including
co-defendants
Ghazi
and Moreno-Godoy,
as well
as front
companies
and bank
accounts
in various
countries,
including
the United
Kingdom,
Spain,
Syria,
Iraq,
Poland,
Bulgaria,
and Romania.
Additionally,
Kassar
has engaged
in money-laundering
transactions
in bank
accounts
throughout
the world
to disguise
the illicit
nature
of his
criminal
proceeds.
|
Schematic
of vessel to transport weapons
provided by defendants to
undercover investigators. |
Between
February
2006 and
May 2007,
Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
agreed
to sell
to the
FARC millions
of dollars
worth
of weapons
+ - including
thousands
of machine
guns,
millions
of rounds
of ammunition,
rocket-propelled
grenade
launchers
(RPGs),
and surface-to-air
missile
systems
(SAMs).
During
a series
of recorded
telephone
calls,
emails,
and in-person
meetings,
Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
agreed
to sell
the weapons
to two
confidential
sources
(CS) working
with the
DEA, who
represented
that they
were acquiring
these
weapons
for the
FARC,
with the
specific
understanding
that the
weapons
were to
be used
to attack
United
States
helicopters
in Colombia.
During
their
consensually
recorded
meetings,
Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
provided
the CSs
with,
among
other
things:
(1) a
schematic
of the
vessel
to be
used to
transport
the weapons;
(2) specifications
for the
SAMs they
agreed
to sell
to the
FARC;
and (3)
bank accounts
in Spain
and Lebanon
that were
ultimately
used to
conceal
more than
$400,000
from DEA
undercover
accounts
that the
CSs represented,
and Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
believed,
were FARC
drug proceeds
for the
weapons
deal.
During
their
meetings
with the
CSs, Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
reviewed
Nicaraguan
end-user
certificates
that were
used to
make the
weapons
deal appear
legitimate.
Kassar
also promised
to provide
the FARC
with ton-quantities
of C4
explosives,
as well
as expert
trainers
from Lebanon
to teach
the FARC
how to
effectively
use C4
and improvised
explosive
devices
(commonly
referred
to as "IEDs").
In addition,
Kassar
offered
to send
a thousand
men to
fight
with the
FARC against
United
States
military
officers
in Colombia.
|
Technical
description, provided by defendants
to undercover investigators,
of surface-to-air missiles. |
U.S.
Attorney
Garcia
praised
the investigative
efforts
of the
DEA, the
Spanish
National
Police,
and the
Romanian
Border
Police.
Garcia
also thanked
the Counterterrorism
Division
of the
Federal
Bureau
of Investigation.
"Monzer
Al Kassar
has long
been one
of the
most prolific
arms dealers
in the
world.
He has
supported
terrorists
and insurgents
by providing
them with
high‑powered
weapons
that have
fueled
the most
violent
conflicts
of the
last three
decades," said
Garcia. "Today,
Kassar
and two
of his
criminal
associates
face charges
for agreeing
to arm
a terrorist
organization
whose
aim was
to kill
American
citizens."
The
Indictment
announced
today
charges
Kassar,
Ghazi,
and Moreno-Godoy
with four
separate
terrorism
offenses:
-
Count
One:
Conspiracy
to provide
material
support
or resources
to a
designated
foreign
terrorist
organization,
in violation
of Title
18,
United
States
Code,
Section
2339B;
-
Count
Two: Conspiracy
to kill
United
States
nationals,
in violation
of Title
18, United
States
Code,
Section
2332(b);
-
Count
Three:
Conspiracy
to kill
United
States
officers
or employees,
in violation
of Title
18, United
States
Code,
Sections
1114 and
1117;
and
-
Count
Four:
Conspiracy
to acquire
and use
an anti-aircraft
missile,
in violation
of Title
18, United
States
Code,
Section
2332g.
In addition,
Kassar
and Moreno-Godoy
are charged
in Count
Five with
money
laundering,
in violation
of Title
18, United
States
Code,
Section
1956.
If
convicted
of Count
One, the
defendants
each face
maximum
sentences
of 15
years’ imprisonment.
If convicted
of Counts
Two through
Four,
the defendants
each face
maximum
sentences
of life
imprisonment,
and a
mandatory
minimum
sentence
of 25
years'
imprisonment
for Count
Four.
Finally,
if convicted
of Count
Five,
Kassar
and Moreno-Godoy
each face
maximum
sentences
of 20
years'
imprisonment.
The
international
law enforcement
operation
announced
today
was the
result
of cooperation
between
the DEA,
the Spanish
National
Police,
and the
Romanian
Border
Police.
Administrator
Tandy's
Remarks
About
the
Arrest
>>