U.S.
Extradites Taliban-Linked Narco-Terrorist
DEA Administrator on Extradition, “We’ve
Made History Today.”
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Narco-terrorist,
Baz Mohammad being taken away by DEA Agents
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KAREN
P. TANDY, the Administrator of the United States Drug Enforcement
Administration, MICHAEL J. GARCIA, the United
States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and JOSEPH
GUCCIONE, the United States Marshal for the Southern District of
New York, joined by Major General SAYED KAMAL SADAAT, Director
General of the Afghanistan Counter Narcotics Police, today announced
the extradition from Afghanistan to New York of BAZ MOHAMMAD, a
Taliban-linked narco-terrorist charged with conspiring to import
more than $25 million worth of heroin from Afghanistan into the
United States and other countries. On June 1, 2005, President George
W. Bush designated BAZ MOHAMMAD as a foreign narcotics kingpin
under the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act. The extradition
announced today represents the first extradition in history from
Afghanistan to the United States.
Ms.
TANDY stated: “We’ve made history today. We’ve
put an end to the safe haven of an Afghan drug lord who orchestrated
an international heroin conspiracy that poisoned Americans. The first
ever extradition of a drug trafficker from Afghanistan proves that
justice and the will of people to be free from the tyranny of the
drug trade will prevail.”
According
to an indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court today, BAZ MOHAMMAD,
since 1990, led an international heroin-trafficking organization
(the “Baz Mohammad Organization”) responsible for manufacturing
and distributing more than $25 million worth of heroin in Afghanistan
and Pakistan. The Baz Mohammad Organization then allegedly arranged
for the heroin to be imported into the United States and other countries
and sold for tens of millions of dollars. According to the indictment,
law enforcement officers have seized more than $1.4 million worth
of the Baz Mohammad Organization’s heroin in the United States
since 1991.
The
indictment charges that BAZ MOHAMMAD controlled opium fields in the
Nangarhar Province of Afghanistan, where poppies were grown and harvested
to produce opium. According to the indictment, after the opium was
harvested, BAZ MOHAMMAD used laboratories in Afghanistan and Pakistan
to process it into heroin. BAZ MOHAMMAD and his co-conspirators then
arranged to transport the heroin from Afghanistan into the United
States, including to New York City, hidden inside suitcases, clothing,
and containers. Once the heroin arrived in the United States, other
members of the Baz Mohammad Organization received the heroin and
distributed the drugs. These co-conspirators then arranged for millions
of dollars in heroin proceeds to be laundered back to MOHAMMAD and
other members of the Baz Mohammad Organization in Afghanistan and
Pakistan.
According
to the indictment, the Baz Mohammad Organization was closely aligned
with the Taliban and other Islamic-extremist groups in Afghanistan.
During the course of the conspiracy, the Baz Mohammad Organization
provided financial support to the Taliban. More specifically, between
1994 and 2000, the Baz Mohammad Organization collected heroin proceeds
in the United States for the Taliban in Afghanistan. In exchange
for its financial support, the Taliban provided the Baz Mohammad
Organization protection for its opium crops, heroin laboratories,
drug-transportation routes, and members and associates.
According
to the Indictment, in or about 1990, BAZ MOHAMMAD met with members
of the Baz Mohammad Organization in his Karachi, Pakistan, residence
and told them that selling heroin in the United States was a “Jihad” because
they were taking the Americans’ money at the same time the
heroin they were paying for was killing them. More recently, in June
2004, BAZ MOHAMMAD and other members of his organization possessed
approximately 120 kilograms of chemical powder, a drug ledger, and
written records reflecting sales of missile explosive devices, rocket
shells, rocket accessories, AK-47s, pistols, bullets, and other weaponry
at a petrol station in the Nangarhar Province of Afghanistan.
The
Indictment unsealed today also charged BASHIR RAHMANY as a member
of the Baz Mohammad Organization. According to the Indictment, BASHIR
RAHMANY, among other things, was responsible for the distribution
of the Baz Mohammad Organization’s heroin to customers in New
York. Law enforcement officers arrested BASHIR RAHMANY in July 2005
in New York, and he remains in custody awaiting trial in this case.
As
noted above, on June 1, 2005, President George W. Bush designated
BAZ MOHAMMAD as a foreign narcotics kingpin pursuant to the Foreign
Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act (the “Kingpin Act”),
which targets, on a worldwide basis, significant foreign narcotics
traffickers, their organizations, and their operatives. The Kingpin
Act authorizes the President of the United States to take these actions
when he determines that a foreign narcotics trafficker presents a
threat to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the
United States. BAZ MOHAMMAD and BASHIR NOORZAI, who was arrested
by the DEA in New York in April 2005 and is being prosecuted by this
Office for heroin-importation charges, are the only Afghan narcotics
traffickers to ever have been sanctioned by the President of the
United States under the Kingpin Act.
The
historic extradition announced today was the result of the cooperative
efforts of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern
District of New York, the United States Department of Justice in
Washington, D.C., the DEA, the United States Marshals Service, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (the “FBI”), the Department
of Homeland Security, Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(“ICE”), and the New York City Police Department (the “NYPD”),
working together under the auspices of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Force (“OCDETF”), as well as the Afghanistan Counter
Narcotics Police and the Interior Ministry of the Islamic Republic
of Afghanistan.
Mr.
GARCIA praised the investigative efforts of the DEA, the FBI, ICE,
the NYPD, and the Afghan Counter Narcotics Police.
Mr.
GARCIA stated: “The first extradition ever between the United
States and Afghanistan has yielded a designated drug king-pin responsible
for conspiring to import $25 million of narcotics into the US, and
for using his illicit profits to support the Taliban and other Islamic
fundamentalist groups.
Thanks
to the extraordinary work of the agencies represented here today,
Afghanistan will no longer be a safe haven for narco-traffickers
like Baz Mohammed.”
If
convicted, BAZ MOHAMMAD, and BASHIR RAHMANY face a maximum sentence
of life in prison and a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in
prison.
Assistant
United States Attorneys BOYD M. JOHNSON III and AMY FINZI are in
charge of the prosecutions.
The
charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations and the
defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.