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  • Arms Network Is Broken Up, Officials Say

    New York Times
    March 15 2005

    Arms Network Is Broken Up, Officials Say
    By JULIA PRESTON

    Published: March 16, 2005


    Law enforcement authorities have broken up a network of international
    arms smugglers who sold black-market assault rifles in the United
    States and were plotting to import military weapons - including
    anti-aircraft missiles and antitank guns - from Eastern Europe,
    federal and New York City officials announced yesterday.

    The arms dealers sold the weapons to a confidential informer working
    with the F.B.I. who told them he was buying the arms for Al Qaeda,
    said David N. Kelley, the United States attorney in Manhattan, at a
    news conference. Mr. Kelley said the dealers were not associated with
    any terrorist organization but were selling the weapons to make
    money.

    The officials charged that the arms ring was led by Artur Solomonyan,
    an Armenian, and Christiaan Dewet Spies, a South African, who have
    been living illegally in New York. In cellphone conversations
    secretly recorded by the F.B.I., the men said they intended to buy
    the more sophisticated weapons primarily from the Russian military
    but also from sellers linked to the armed forces in Ukraine and
    Georgia, Mr. Kelley said.

    Although no terrorists were directly involved, the officials said the
    case represented a sobering warning that there were dealers in the
    illegal international arms market capable of importing battlefield
    weapons to the United States and ready to sell them to terrorists.

    "These defendants may not have been terrorists themselves, but
    they've shown a transparent willingness to do anything with anybody
    so long as it generates income for their organization," said Andrew
    Arena, a special agent in charge of the Criminal Division of the
    F.B.I. in New York.

    Mr. Kelley unsealed a federal criminal complaint for weapons
    trafficking yesterday against 18 people he said participated in the
    arms network. The two accused ringleaders and 15 other defendants
    were arrested by the F.B.I. and the local police Monday night and
    yesterday morning in roundups in New York City, Los Angeles and
    Miami, the officials said. The remaining defendant, identified as
    Armand Abramian, 27, was being sought in California.

    Mr. Solomonyan, 26, protested that he was not guilty as he was
    escorted yesterday into Federal District Court in Manhattan. "I was
    trapped in this thing," he said. "I don't know what's going on." Also
    named in the complaint was his brother, Levon, 24.

    The arrests came after a yearlong investigation in which the
    confidential informer secretly recorded hours of conversations with
    the defendants, and the F.B.I. taped more than 15,000 calls on seven
    telephones, officials said.

    During the year, they said, the arms ring sold the informer eight
    illegal weapons, mostly military assault rifles, including two
    AK-47's and an Israeli-made Uzi. The dealers delivered three of the
    guns in New York City, three in Los Angeles and two in Fort
    Lauderdale, Fla., in transactions that were monitored by the F.B.I.

    In recent weeks, the defendants made a $2.2 million deal to sell the
    informer more powerful, mainly Russian-made weapons, Mr. Kelley said.
    They gave the informer photographs of the weapons, which they said
    they were holding somewhere in Eastern Europe and were ready to
    import by ship to the United States.

    The photos, which officials displayed yesterday, included images of
    two SA-7b Strella surface-to-air heat-seeking anti-aircraft missiles
    and a Russian AT-4 Spigot antitank guided missile and launcher.

    Early in their discussions, Artur Solomonyan told the informer he
    could obtain enriched uranium that could be "used in the subway," Mr.
    Kelley said. But he said the subject was "never followed up," and
    there was no evidence that the arms ring ever trafficked in nuclear
    or other weapons of mass destruction. "It never happened," Mr. Kelley
    said.

    Mr. Spies, 33, told the informer that he had ties to the Russian
    mafia, the complaint says. But none of the defendants are Russian;
    they include people from Georgia, Italy and France, as well as
    several Americans. Mr. Kelley said that officials suspected they were
    buying arms from "rogue folks within Eastern European military
    circles" but that it was still not clear whether they were members of
    the military or black marketeers.

    According to the complaint, the F.B.I. informer began meeting a year
    ago with Mr. Spies, whom he had known for several years, and Mr.
    Solomonyan.


    The arrests began Monday night, when Mr. Solomonyan and Mr. Spies
    went to a meeting with the informer in Manhattan, where they had been
    told he would give them false immigration green cards so they could
    leave the United States to pick up the promised weapons. Instead,
    they were met by F.B.I. and New York police agents.
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