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Armenia Reports Arrest in Smuggling Case

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  • Armenia Reports Arrest in Smuggling Case

    Armenia Reports Arrest in Smuggling Case

    AP Online
    Mar 18, 2005


    Armenian police have made arrests in connection with an alleged plot
    uncovered by U.S. authorities to smuggle Russian military weapons into
    the United States, a security official said Thursday.

    Security officials would not say how many people had been arrested in
    Armenia, or even when the arrests took place. But Grach Arutyunian,
    first deputy of the National Security Service, said one of the
    suspects in the United States, Artur Solomonyan, has lived in America
    since he became an exchange student in 1998.

    The security service said Wednesday that Solomonyan has been wanted by
    police in Armenia since 2001 on suspicion of avoiding military
    service.

    Earlier this week, U.S. authorities announced they had charged 18
    people in the scheme. The arrests resulted from a yearlong
    investigation in which an FBI informant posed as an arms buyer who
    claimed to have ties to al-Qaida.

    The informant, an explosives expert, contacted the FBI after he was
    approached by a man who said he had access to weapons from the former
    Soviet Union and believed the informant could find a willing buyer,
    federal prosecutors said.

    Using a digital camera, members of the ring, which included Armenians
    and South Africans, provided pictures of the weapons they said they
    had available for sale, prosecutors said.

    The pictures, apparently taken somewhere in Armenia, showed anti-tank
    missiles, a Russian missile launcher and an anti-tank rifle, among
    other weapons, officials said.

    According to a criminal complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court in
    Manhattan, the informant met two of the defendants, Artur Solomonyan
    and Christiaan Dewet Spies, on several occasions in New York to
    discuss the weapons deals.

    Solomonyan, an Armenian citizen living in New York and Los Angeles,
    and Spies, a South African citizen living in New York, were arrested
    Monday night at a Manhattan hotel after meeting one last time with the
    informant to finalize their plans before leaving the country to obtain
    the weapons, prosecutors alleged.
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