Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gang of arms peddlers held

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Gang of arms peddlers held

    New York Daily News
    March 16 2005

    Gang of arms peddlers held

    18 arrested in fed sting

    By ALISON GENDAR
    DAILY NEWS POLICE BUREAU CHIEF


    Armenian national Artur Solomonyan was one of 18 men collared by the
    feds yesterday in an arms smuggling sting.

    A New York-based gang allegedly peddling Russian-made surface-to-air
    missiles and rocket-propelled grenades was blown away yesterday in an
    FBI sting, officials said.
    The heavy weapons pipeline stretched from Eastern Europe to the
    Brooklyn home of an alleged arms smuggler who once boasted of being
    able to get uranium to bomb the subways, authorities said.

    Artur Solomonyan, a Armenian national who lives in Sheepshead Bay,
    was among 18 men arrested by the feds after a year-long
    investigation.

    The probe was mounted with the help of a gun-savvy informant who
    reeled in the arms dealers posing as a moneyman eager to buy weapons
    for Al Qaeda terrorists, officials said.

    "The defendants showed they were willing to sell anything to anybody
    for the right price," said Manhattan U.S. Attorney David Kelley.

    Investigators grabbed Solomonyan, 26, and Christiaan Spies, 33, also
    of Sheepshead Bay, Monday night outside the Embassy Suites Hotel in
    Battery Park City, police said.

    The rest of the alleged dealers were routed from their beds in New
    York, Miami and Los Angeles early yesterday.

    "This case posted a big 'Keep Out' sign for arms traffickers
    everywhere," said Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

    Solomonyan and Spies, a South African, allegedly offered to ship more
    than 200 rocket propelled grenade launchers and shoulder-fired
    surface-to-air missiles from Armenia and Chechnya to New York, Los
    Angeles and Miami.

    Solomonyan touted alleged connections to ex-KGB officials and former
    military leaders in Chechnya and Georgia willing to sell weapons to
    the highest bidder, officials said.

    "They had the connections and weapons terrorists need to turn a
    deadly dream into a deadly reality," said Andrew Arena,
    agent-in-charge of the FBI's New York criminal division.

    Solomonyan and Spies provided the informant with a Web site and
    password to view a catalogue of military hardware, authorities said.

    Solomonyan allegedly set the informant up with a host of arms
    dealers, and sold him eight weapons - including an Israeli Uzi, SKS
    fully automatic assault rifle and AK-47s.

    Solomonyan and Spies were arrested before they could travel to Europe
    with the phony IDs and green cards provided by the informant,
    officials said.

    Solomayan was "unbelievably determined to be a major arms dealer,"
    said a law enforcement source. "Combine his level of determination
    and the arms bazaar in Eastern Europe and you have trouble."

    Afraid that the informant thought he was too young to be a weapons
    dealer, Solomonyan also boasted he could get "enriched uranium ...
    which could be used in the subway," according to court papers.

    But investigators found no evidence that he could make good on the
    one-time claim, and uranium was never mentioned again in more than
    15,000 intercepted phone calls.


    With Melissa Grace and Celeste Katz
Working...
X