Published January 13, 2015
The government, stepping up efforts to choke the flow of money to suspected terrorist organizations, announced the indictments Wednesday of seven people in Texas and the arrests of seven others in Michigan. All are suspected of channeling funds to Arab countries that the U.S. government says are terrorist havens.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said federal officials are targeting those who finance terrorism as much as those who carry out attacks.
"Just as we will prosecute the terrorists who plant the bomb, we will prosecute the terrorist supporters who write the check," Ashcroft said at a news conference.
A 33-count indictment unsealed in Dallas charged four brothers with money laundering and selling computer equipment to Syria and Libya, two countries the United States says are state sponsors of terrorism. All four have been arrested.
The indictment also names a fifth brother, already in custody, as well as Mousa Abu Marzook, a leader of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, and his wife, Nadia Elashi, a cousin of the five brothers.
U.S. Customs Service agents, meanwhile. raided several businesses and homes in Dearborn, Mich., and arrested seven people. Officials said the people and businesses were involved in illegal money transfers that sent as much as $50 million a year to Yemen, a hotbed for al-Qaida and other Muslin extremists.
A day earlier, three men in Lackawanna, N.Y., were arrested and charged with sending more than $480,000 to Yemen without a license to operate a money-transferring business. The three — Mohamed Albanna, Ali Albanna, and Ali Elbaneh — were released on bail Wednesday. They are relatives of Jaber Elbaneh, accused of belonging to an al-Qaida terror cell in Lackawanna.
Justice Department officials said the arrests over the past two days were not connected, but were part of an effort by government law enforcement agencies to cut off terrorist financing.
"The war against terrorism is a war of accountants and auditors, as well as a war of weaponry and soldiers," Ashcroft said.
A Hamas official, speaking on condition of anonymity, criticized the arrests.
"We consider this part of the ongoing war against Islam and the Islamic institutions across the world," the official said. "There are some elements in the American administration who are trying very hard to harm the image of Islam and to link it with so-called terror, which is not true, because Islam is a religion of tolerance."
The Texas case involved a company in a Dallas suburb, Infocom Corp., for which all five brothers work. The company accepted a $250,000 investment from Marzook, who was deported in 1995 after the federal government designated him a terrorist, and made payments to Marzook's wife, according to the indictment. Both are out of the country. Marzook is believed to be in Syria.
Those arrested were Bayan Elashi, Ghassan Elashi, Basman Elashi and Hazim Elashi. The fifth brother, Ihsan Elashyi, already is in custody on charges of illegally exporting computer goods to the Middle East. If convicted, they each face up to 45 years in prison and $7.2 million in fines.
Ghassan Elashi, the company's vice president for marketing, headed the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development. The foundation's assets were frozen by the Treasury Department in December 2001 on the grounds that it allegedly funneled money to terrorists. FBI investigators concluded that Holy Land leaders were Hamas members and the charity was the primary U.S. fund-raising organ for the terrorist group.
Ashcroft said Infocom was in the same office park and shared some of the same employees as the Holy Land Foundation.
In Michigan, authorities arrested Mohammed Aidaros Abdulla, David Nasser Ali, Foiad H. Mohamad, Gamil Manea-Ahmed Al-Najar, Hussein A. Mohamed and Abdulla H. Mohamad. The seventh individual arrested is an unidentified Immigration and Naturalization Service employee who officials say had overstayed his visa.
Customs agents seized records and computers from some of the businesses, which included convenience stores, service stations and restaurants. In addition, seizure warrants have been issued for records from banks in the Detroit area and Toledo, Ohio.
The Michigan and Lonyo Service Center was one of the businesses raided. It's owned by Ali and Kalid Kaid, who said it's a common practice in the Yemeni community to send money to relatives in their native country.
He was skeptical of the government's claim. "We really question the amount of money that the government is talking about," Kaid said.
https://www.foxnews.com/story/feds-indict-seven-in-dallas-area-terror-probe