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Eight Arrested by the FBI &
Charged With Conspiring to Provide Material Support & Resources to the
LTTE
[Tuesday, August 22, 2006 - 9.00 GMT]
Department of Justice
United States Attorney Roslynn R. Mauskopf
Eastern District of New York
Two complaints were unsealed this morning in
U.S. District Court in Brooklyn charging eight defendants with multiple
crimes, including conspiracy to provide material support and resources
to a designated foreign terrorist organization – the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE or Tamil Tigers). Four of the defendants
were arrested on Long Island, New York, on August 19, 2006, after three
of them traveled to New York from Canada to attempt to purchase from an
agent acting in an undercover capacity Russian-made SA18 surface-to-air
missiles, missile launchers, AK-47s, and other weapons to be used by the
LTTE in its rapidly escalating conflict against the Sri Lankan military.
These four defendants were acting at the direction of senior LTTE
leadership in Sri Lanka.
In the second complaint, multiple defendants are charged with providing
material support to the LTTE that included the procurement of military
equipment and dual use technology, fund raising, and money laundering
through “front” charitable organizations and U.S. bank accounts. The
complaint also charges that the defendants attempted to obtain
classified information, conspired to bribe U.S. public officials in an
effort to remove the LTTE from the U.S. State Department’s list of
Foreign Terrorist Organizations, and dealt in illegal financial
transactions with LTTE.
As alleged in both complaints, the defendants are closely connected with
LTTE leadership in Sri Lanka, and many of them have personally met with
LTTE leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran, and other senior leaders of the
terrorist group.
The investigation leading to the arrests announced today was conducted
by the Newark Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Joint
Terrorism Task Force (JTTF), with assistance provided by more than 20 of
the FBI’s Field Offices, including New York, NY, New Haven, CT, Buffalo,
NY, Seattle, WA, Baltimore, MD, Chicago, IL, and San Jose, CA; the
United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Connecticut; U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); the U.S. Department of State;
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police National Security Program; and British
law enforcement authorities.
The defendants arrested in the Eastern District of New York are
scheduled to have their initial appearances this afternoon before United
States Magistrate Judge Marilyn D. Go at the U.S. Courthouse, 225 Cadman
Plaza East, Brooklyn, New York.
“The multi-faceted scheme by members and supporters of the Sri Lankan
organization known as the Tamil Tigers demonstrates the need for
continued vigilance in the global war against terrorists,” said Attorney
General Alberto R. Gonzales. “These defendants allegedly sought to
obtain, through a variety of means, weapons and materials to carry out a
deadly campaign of violence. We will use every tool in our power to
disrupt the activities of those who seek to harm others, both here and
abroad.”
“As charged, for more than 15 years, the LTTE has waged a war of terror,
assassinations, and suicide bombings in Sri Lanka and elsewhere,” stated
United States Attorney Roslynn R. Mauskopf. “We refuse to allow the LTTE
and its supporters to use the United States as a source of supply for
weapons, technology, and financial resources.” Ms. Mauskopf added that
the investigation is continuing.
“Today’s arrests of high level Tamil Tiger
financiers and operatives are a clear example of the FBI’s ability to
combine long term, complex intelligence gathering, terrorism prevention,
and law enforcement,” stated Leslie G. Wiser, Jr., FBI Special
Agent-in-Charge, Newark Field Office. “This weekend’s operation has
severely impaired the Tamil Tigers’ ability to acquire funding and
weapons for their ongoing terror operations in Sri Lanka.”
The LTTE
According to the complaints, the LTTE was founded in 1976 and uses
illegal methods to raise money, acquire weapons and technology, and
publicize its cause of establishing an independent Tamil state in
northern Sri Lanka. The LTTE began its armed conflict against the Sri
Lankan government in 1983, and utilizes a guerrilla strategy that often
includes acts of terrorism. With an army of several thousand combatants,
the LTTE controls most of the northern and eastern coastal areas of Sri
Lanka. The complaints allege that over the past 15 years, the LTTE has
conducted approximately 200 suicide bombings, resulting in the deaths of
hundreds of victims, and carried out numerous political assassinations,
including the May 1991 assassination of former Indian Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi, the 1993 assassination of the President of Sri Lanka,
Ranasinghe Premadasa, the July 1999 assassination of Neelan Thiruchelvam,
a member of the Sri Lankan parliament, the June 2000 assassination of
C.V. Goonaratne, the Sri Lankan Industry Minister, and the August 2006
assassination of the Sri Lankan government’s peace secretariat,
Ketheshwaran Loganathan. Beginning in 2002, the LTTE and the Sri Lankan
government operated under a tenuous cease-fire agreement, but that
agreement has essentially ended, and since April 2006, more than 1,700
people have been killed in the escalating conflict.
In 1997, the LTTE was designated by U.S. State Department as a Foreign
Terrorist Organization and therefore may not legally raise money or
procure specified equipment or materials in the United States.
Attempts to Bribe Purported State Department Officials
According to one complaint, MURUGESU VINAYAGAMOORTHY, a senior LTTE
supporter, NACHIMUTHU SOCRATES, a LTTE supporter in North America, and
other defendants attempted and conspired to bribe purported U.S. State
Department officials to remove the LTTE from the State Department’s
Foreign Terrorist Organization list. Beginning in 2004 and continuing
over a period of several months, the defendants met with a confidential
informant (CI-1), who was operating under law enforcement supervision,
and two purported State Department officials, identified in the
complaint as UC-1 and UC-2, and discussed the financial terms of the
bribe, including a $1 million up-front payment. During one meeting, the
complaint alleges that VINAYAGAMOORTHY said that he had traveled to the
United States for the meeting on behalf of senior LTTE leadership in Sri
Lanka, and that the LTTE “leader”– referring to Velupillai Prabhakaran –
would make the ultimate decision as to how much the LTTE was willing to
pay the State Department officials.
During some of these meetings, UC-1 and SOCRATES also discussed the sale
of classified United States intelligence information to the LTTE. The
complaint alleges that SOCRATES made interim bribery payments to the CI
to give to UC-1. Ultimately, the defendants put the scheme on hold due
to “the prevailing climate” in Sri Lanka.
According to the complaint, in December 2005,
SOCRATES met with UC-1 and CI-1 in order to purchase a purported
classified intelligence document concerning the LTTE which made
reference to an investigation by the United States and a foreign
government into the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization (TRO), a
charitable organization suspected of being a “front” for a LTTE fund
raising organization. Although the document was presented to the
defendants as containing classified information, it was created by the
FBI for purposes of the investigation. SOCRATES and CI-1 gave UC-1
$1,000 in cash, and UC-1 permitted SOCRATES to review the document.
SOCRATES, in turn, passed the information to VINAYAGAMOORTHY.
Attempt to Purchase Surface-to-Air Missiles
As alleged in the other complaint filed today, in July 2006, CI-1
received a telephone call, which was consensually recorded, from a LTTE
supporter, NADARASA YOGARASA (YOGA). YOGA believed that the CI had a
relationship with a black market arms dealer who could acquire heavy
military artillery, including missiles. On July 31, 2006, CI-1, YOGA,
and SATHAJHAN SARACHANDRAN (SATHA), a LTTE supporter, met at a location
in Queens, New York, and in a recorded conversation SATHA discussed the
types of weapons he wanted to purchase on behalf of the LTTE,
specifically, surface-to-air missiles to be used against “the Kfir,” a
reference to the Israeli-made Kfir fighter jet aircraft used by the Sri
Lankan military against the LTTE. SATHA, a Canadian citizen who had
traveled to New York from Canada for this meeting, advised CI-1 that he
was taking direction from Pottu Amman, who handled “outside purchasing”
of arms. Pottu Amman leads the intelligence and operations wing of the
LTTE. On August 7, 2006, CI-1 and YOGA met at another location in Queens
and discussed various weapons that the LTTE needed, including AK-47s and
truck-mounted missile systems.
On August 18, 2006, SATHA, SAHILAL SABARATNAM (SAHIL), identified in the
complaint as the “financial guy,” and THIRUTHANIKAN THANIGASALAM (THANI)
traveled to the United States by car from Canada. SAHIL and THANI, both
Canadian citizens, are LTTE supporters.
On Saturday, August 19, 2006, CI-1 met SATHA, SAHIL, and THANI at a
location in Queens, and then they drove to another location on Long
Island, where they met for several hours with two undercover law
enforcement officers (identified in the complaint as UC-1 and UC-2). The
meeting was consensually recorded. At the outset, UC-1 asked the
defendants what they wanted to purchase, and THANI said, “We need
something for Kfir,” the Israeli-made fighter jets. UC-1 asked, “You
want to shoot this airplane down?” THANI said yes. THANI also said they
wanted weaponry to destroy boats. The defendants discussed using bank
accounts in Switzerland, St. Croix, or other offshore locations to
finance the purchase, and THANI stated that the defendants wanted
delivery to occur ship-to-ship in the Indian Ocean. THANI and SAHIL
requested UC-2, who posed as a technical expert in military weaponry, to
travel to Sri Lanka to train the ultimate users of the arms. THANI
indicated that in the future, they wanted to purchase between 50 and 100
surface-to-air missiles, but would start with the smaller quantity of
10, obtain training on them in Sri Lanka and, if the missiles worked
well, buy the remainder. During the meeting, the parties discussed the
quantity and price of the missiles and AK-47 assault rifles, and agreed
that an initial shipment would consist of 10 SA-18 surface-to-air
missiles and 500 AK-47s, and that UC-2 would provide technical training
on the use of the missiles. The parties also discussed a total price of
between $900,000 and $937,500 for the equipment and the training. SATHA,
SAHIL, and THANI then examined an SA-18 missile, which was brought into
the room in a long wooden crate, as well as the missile’s firing tube
and trigger mechanism, and two AK-47 assault weapons.
LTTE Procurement Activities
As detailed in the complaints, the defendants used several e-mail
accounts in the United States to inquire about or purchase military
arms, unmanned aerial vehicles for jamming radio transmissions and
radar, submarine design software, flight lessons, cell towers, radio
controller equipment, global positioning system equipment, short
wavelength radio equipment, radio and satellite equipment, air traffic
equipment, cameras, computers, and a host of other items to be used by
the LTTE. They also allegedly used U.S.-based bank accounts to launder
money for LTTE-funded activities, including the purchase of operational
equipment and travel to and from Sri Lanka.
LTTE Fund Raising in North America
The complaints allege that the defendants’ conspiracy to provide
material support to LTTE included fund raising in the United States and
Canada, relying on “front” charitable organizations to give the fund
raising the appearance of legitimacy. These organizations were also used
to send goods and material to LTTE in Sri Lanka.
Maximum Sentences Defendants Face if
Convicted
If convicted, the defendants face the following maximum sentences: 15
years for conspiracy to provide material support to a designated
terrorist organization, in violation of 18
U.S.C.
§ 2339B, 10
years for dealing in property of a specially designated terrorist,
pursuant to 50 U.S.C. § 1705(b), and five years for conspiracy to bribe
public officials, in violation of 18
U.S.C.
§ 201. The
charges in the complaints are merely allegations, and the defendants are
presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
The government’s case is being prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorneys Jeffrey Knox, Robert M. Radick, and
Gurbir Grewal, under the supervision of Kelly T. Currie, Chief of the
U.S. Attorney’s Office Violent Crimes and Terrorism Section.
The Defendants:
SATHAJHAN SARACHANDRAN, also known as
“Satha” DOB: 10/31/79
SAHILAL SABARATNAM, also known as
“Sahil” DOB: 2/8/79
THIRUTHANIKAN THANIGASALAM, also known as
“Thani” DOB: 6/11/68
NADARASA YOGRARASA, also known as
“Yoga” DOB: 10/8/54
MURUGESU VINAYAGAMOORTHY, also known as “Dr. Moorthy” and
“Vinayagamoorthy Murugesu” DOB: 4/24/49
NACHIMUTHU SOCRATES
DOB:11/20/51
VIJAYSHANTHAR PATPANATHAN, also known as
“Chandru” DOB: 4/5/62 THIRUKUMARAN
SIVASUBRAMANIAM DOB: 6/20/79
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Last Updated
Date: August 22, 2006 -9.00 GMT |
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