Monzer al-Kassar

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Monzer al-Kassar
منذر الكسار
Born1945 (age 78–79)
Hama, Syria
NationalitySyrian
Other names"Prince of Marbella"
OccupationArms dealer
SpouseRaghdaa Habbal
RelativesGhassan
Criminal chargeSelling arms
Penalty30 years imprisonment

Monzer al-Kassar (

Iran-Contra scandal.[2] On 20 November 2008, he was convicted in U.S. federal court as part of a U.S. government sting, for agreeing to sell arms to undercover agents posing as suppliers for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a Colombian guerrilla organization.[3][4] He was sentenced to thirty years' imprisonment.[5]

Early years

Al-Kassar was born in

Nebek. His father was a lawyer and diplomat who at various times was Syria's ambassador to Canada and India.[6]

According to U.S. authorities, Monzer's mentor in the drug and arms trade was his older brother, Ghassan, who had begun selling drugs in the late 1960s. Ghassan remained in the arms business until his death of natural causes in 2009.[6]

Al-Kassar attended law school in the late 1960s.[6]

According to a 2009 report by the United States Congress, Monzer al-Kassar supplied weapons and military equipment to armed groups engaged in violent conflicts in Nicaragua, Brazil, Cyprus, Bosnia, Croatia, Somalia, Iran and Iraq.[7] In 1970, al-Kassar had his first Interpol-recorded arrest, for theft, in Trieste, Italy.[6]

United Kingdom

In 1972, he was arrested in Copenhagen for selling hashish. He then moved to the United Kingdom. He lived in Sloane Square in London, where he took part in an operation that imported heroin and hashish from Lebanon, then bought arms with the profits and smuggled them back to Lebanon.[6] In either 1974 or 1977[1] (sources conflict), al-Kassar was arrested and jailed in the UK for selling hashish. He served less than two years in jail.[6]

In 1981, he married Raghdaa Habbal, who was seventeen years old at the time, and who came from a well-connected Syrian family in Beirut.[6]

In 1984, al-Kassar was expelled from the UK for drug and arms trafficking.[8]

"The Prince of Marbella"

After his expulsion from the UK, al-Kassar moved, along with his wife and by then two children, to Marbella, Spain. There he bought a mansion, that he named "Palacio de Mifadil" ("Palace of My Virtue", in a combination of Spanish and Arabic), and quickly developed a reputation as a wealthy, ostentatious businessman. The European press soon began to call him "The Prince of Marbella". In 1985 he was the subject of a profile in the French magazine Paris Match, which wrote, "in a few years, this Syrian merchant became one of the most powerful businessmen in the world."[6]

The

Abu Abbas, to safety in one of his private airplanes. Al-Kassar has denied the charge. In 1995, a court in Madrid acquitted Al-Kassar of all charges related to the hijacking.[9]

In 1987, investigations into the Iran-Contra scandal found that al-Kassar had been paid 1.5 million GBP by someone in the U.S. government to sell arms to Nicaraguan

Swiss bank account controlled by Oliver North and his co-conspirators."[6]

In 1992, al-Kassar made arms sales valued in the millions of USD to Croatia, Bosnia and Somalia, violating United Nations arms embargoes to all three countries. That same year, al-Kassar obtained an Argentine passport, with the alleged plan to move there, with the assistance of then-president Carlos Menem, whose parents were from the same town in Syria as those of al-Kassar, and who may have been a relative. (In 2000, he was indicted in Argentina for "obtaining documents under false pretences".) Also in 1992, the Spanish government arrested him for his alleged earlier involvement in the Achille Lauro hijacking, along with "falsification of documents" and "possession of illegal weapons and vehicles". He spent more than a year in jail before being released on bail. The trial came in 1995, and he was found not guilty on all charges.[1]

In July 2006, the government of

Iraqi insurgency.[1]

DEA sting

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, there was renewed interest in the United States in apprehending those connected to terrorism, as well as new laws that gave greater power for "extraterritorial jurisdiction", or the ability of the U.S. government to investigate and arrest people suspected of committing crimes outside the United States.[6] In 2006, the Drug Enforcement Administration decided to put together a sting to trap al-Kassar, code-named "Operation Legacy" and led by Jim Soiles and the DEA's Special Operations Division. They enlisted a 69-year-old Palestinian former member of the Black September Organization, referred to publicly only as "Samir", who was then being held in a U.S. prison. Samir spent much of 2006 trying to arrange a meeting with al-Kassar, and was finally able to in December 2006.[6]

In February 2007, the DEA had Samir arrange a meeting between al-Kassar and two Guatemalan informants posing as FARC insurgents who wanted to purchase weapons to use against American military forces. The group met several more times, and at later meetings the informants were wearing hidden video cameras, which recorded al-Kassar agreeing to the terms of the deal.[6]

The

Barajas Airport in Madrid arrested him after he got off the plane.[6] He was charged with conspiring to kill Americans, supplying terrorists, obtaining anti-aircraft missiles and money laundering.[10]

On 13 June 2008, al-Kassar was extradited to the United States of America for trial;[11] he arrived in New York in shackles the following day.[12] On 20 November 2008, he was convicted in federal court of five charges, among them money laundering and conspiring to sell arms to suppliers for FARC.[4] Sentencing for al-Kassar and co-defendant Luis Felipe Moreno Godoy was scheduled for 18 February 2009.[3] The relatives of Leon Klinghoffer, the man murdered in the Achille Lauro incident, were in court for the verdict.[4] Al-Kassar was represented by Ira Sorkin.[13]

24 February 2009 al-Kassar was sentenced to 30 years in prison for conspiring to sell weapons to Colombian rebels.

A New Yorker article about the sting speculated that al-Kassar had been unusually lax in his behavior with the fake arms buyers, and that this may have been caused by financial desperation on al-Kassar's part, since, due to a decrease in world conflicts, the international arms trade was slower than it had been during the late 20th century.[6]

Imprisonment

Since 2009, al-Kassar has been serving a sentence at a federal prison in Marion, Illinois. He is due for release in 2033.[14]

Since 2018, he has actively posted on Facebook, maintaining that he is innocent of the charges against him, and accusing the DEA and the Mossad of falsifying evidence used to convict him.[15][non-primary source needed]

Monzer Al Kassar, pro se and incarcerated, appealed from the District Court’s denial of his 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(1)(A) motion for compassionate release. Al Kassar argued that he as at high risk of contracting severe illness from COVID-19 due to his chronic health conditions, which, he argued, was an extraordinary and compelling reason to release him. The District Court denied his initial motion, finding that the risk of contracting COVID-19 at the prison where Al Kassar is detained, USP Marion, was minimal at the time. Al Kassar renewed his motion three months later, arguing that conditions at the prison had deteriorated. The District Court denied the renewed motion, ruling that Al Kassar had established extraordinary and compelling reasons for compassionate release, but that 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors weighed against releasing him.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Meet the 'Prince of Marbella' – is he really supporting Iraq's insurgency?, Aram Roston, The Observer, 1 October 2006
  2. S2CID 247349218
    .
  3. ^ a b Larry Neumeister (20 November 2008). "Arms dealer caught in terror sting convicted in NY". Associated Press. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  4. ^ a b c Benjamin Weiser (20 November 2008). "2 Arms Dealers Convicted of Plot to Aid Terrorists". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  5. ^ Al Jazeera, US jails Syrian-born Arms Dealer, 25 February 2009
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "The Trafficker – The Decades-Long Battle to Catch an International Arms Broker, Patrick Radden Keefe, The New Yorker, 8 February 2010
  7. ^ United States Congress. Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations for 2010: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, One Hundred Eleventh Congress, First Session · Part 7. House. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies · 2009, page 122
  8. ^ Matthew Brunwasser. "Gallery of International Arms Dealers: Monzer al Kassar: The Prince of Marbella: Arms To All Sides". Frontline. PBS. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  9. ^ "Syrian Arms Dealer Acquitted In Achille Lauro Case". Associated Press. 22 March 1995.
  10. ^ "Spain arrests arms dealer Al Kassar on U.S. charges", Reuters, 8 June 2007
  11. Fox News Channel. Associated Press
    . 13 June 2008.
  12. ^ Alan Feuer (14 June 2008). "A major arms dealer in shackles, delivered to New York". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Diana B. Henriques (11 March 2009). "Madoff Lawyer Absorbs Part of the Rage". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Patterson, Thom (2 October 1017). "How to catch a 'Peacock': Inside the US take down of a global criminal". CNN.
  15. ^ "MY REPLY AND CHALLENGES TO FAKE NEWS POSTED ON 'WIKIPEDIA' PAGE!". Facebook. 7 May 2019.
  16. ^ United States v. Al Kassar, 20-2825-cr (2d Cir. 28 June 2021)

External links