Washington DC: DEA Administrator,
Michele M. Leonhart on April 5, 2012 announced that international arms
dealer VIKTOR BOUT was sentenced to 25 years in prison for conspiring to sell
millions of dollars worth of weapons, including hundreds of surface-to-air
missiles and over 20,000 AK-47s to the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de
Colombia (the “FARC”), a designated foreign terrorist organization based in
Colombia. BOUT understood that the weapons would be used to kill
Americans in Colombia. On November 2, 2011, BOUT was convicted on all
four counts for which he was charged after a three-week jury trial before
U.S. District Judge Shira A. Scheindlin.
“The crimes Viktor Bout committed
represent the worst case scenario for modern law enforcement--the merger of
criminal international narcotics cartels with their terrorism enablers,”
Leonhart said. “But his sentencing today also reflects the best of modern
international law enforcement-- sophisticated, determined, and coordinated.
Thanks to the extraordinary efforts of criminal investigators and prosecutors
in the United States, Thailand, Romania, Curacao and elsewhere, the ‘Merchant
of Death’ has finally been held to account in a court of law for his years of
profiteering from death and misery around the world.”
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet
Bharara said: “Viktor Bout has been international arms trafficking enemy
number one for many years, arming some of the most violent conflicts around
the globe. He was finally brought to justice in an American court for
agreeing to provide a staggering number of military grade weapons to an
avowed terrorist organization committed to killing Americans. Today’s
sentence is a fitting coda for this career arms trafficker of the most
dangerous order.”
According to the Indictment and
evidence presented at the trial:
Since the 1990s, BOUT has been an
international weapons trafficker. As a result of his weapons
trafficking activities in Liberia, the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control within the Department of Treasury placed him on the
Specially Designated Nationals list in 2004. The designation prohibits
any transactions between BOUT and U.S. nationals, and freezes any of his
assets that are within the jurisdiction of the United States.
Between November 2007 and March
2008, BOUT agreed to sell millions of dollars’ worth of weapons to the FARC,
including 700-800 surface-to-air missiles (“SAMs”), over 20,000 AK-47
firearms, 10 million rounds of ammunition, five tons of C-4 plastic
explosives, “ultralight” airplanes outfitted with grenade launchers, and
unmanned aerial vehicles. BOUT agreed to sell the weapons to two
confidential sources working with the DEA (the “CSs”), who represented that
they were acquiring them for the FARC, with the specific understanding that
the weapons were to be used to attack U.S. helicopters in Colombia.
During a covertly recorded meeting
in Thailand on March 6, 2008, BOUT stated to the CSs that he could arrange to
airdrop the arms to the FARC in Colombia, and offered to sell them two cargo
planes that could be used for arms deliveries. He also provided a map
of South America and asked the CSs to show him American radar locations in
Colombia. BOUT said that he understood that the CSs wanted the arms to
use against American personnel in Colombia, and advised that, “we have the
same enemy,” referring to the United States. He also stated that the
FARC’s fight against the United States was also his fight and that he had
been “fighting the United States…for ten to fifteen years.” During the
meeting, he also offered to provide people to train the FARC in the use of
the arms.
The evidence presented at trial
included a recording of the March 6, 2008 meeting between BOUT, the CSs, his
former associate Andrew Smulian, and others. Smulian was charged along
with BOUT in March 2008 and pled guilty in July 2008. Smulian
cooperated with the Government and, along with the two CSs, provided
testimony at the trial.
In addition to his prison term,
Judge Scheindlin sentenced BOUT to 5 years of supervised released and ordered
him to forfeit $15 million.
BOUT was arrested in Thailand in
March 2008 based on a Complaint filed in Manhattan federal court. He
was subsequently charged in a four-count Indictment in April 2008 and
extradited to the Southern District of New York in November 2010. At
trial, he was convicted of (1) conspiring to kill U.S. nationals; (2)
conspiring to kill U.S. officers and employees; (3) conspiring to acquire and
export anti-aircraft missiles; and (4) conspiring to provide material support
to a designated foreign terrorist organization.
Besides the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration and Southern District of New York, the Royal Thai Police was
instrumental in the success of the Bout case. In addition, the Romanian
National Police, the Romanian Prosecutor’s Office Attached to the High Court
of Cassation and Justice, the Korps Politie Curaçao of the Netherlands Antilles,
and the Danish National Police Security Services assisted, as well as the
U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs.
Source: Ekow Shalders(Institute
for Democracy and Press Freedom,USA)
|
Friday, April 6, 2012
VIKTOR BOUT SENTENCED TO 25 YEARS FOR TERRORIST CRIMES
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