Pakistani businessman gets probation charges on procuring equipment for military unlawfully


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 22-09-2018 07:24 IST | Created: 22-09-2018 06:20 IST
Pakistani businessman gets probation charges on procuring equipment for military unlawfully
  • Country:
  • Pakistan
  • United States

A US district court has sentenced a Pakistani-origin businessman to three years of probation on charges of procuring material and equipment for the Pakistani military unlawfully.

First six months of the three-year probation is in home confinement, John Durham, US Attorney for the District of Connecticut, said Saturday.

Imran Khan, 44, had pleaded guilty to one count of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. In his guilty plea in June 2017, Khan specifically admitted that, between August 2012 and January 2013, he procured, received and exported to Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, the Pakistan Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission, or the National Institute of Lasers & Optronics.

All of these companies are listed in the US Department of Commerce Entity List.

According to court documents and statements made in court, from 2012 to 2016, Khan and two of his family members engaged in a scheme to purchase goods that were controlled under the Export Administration Regulations and to export those goods without a license to Pakistan.

Through companies conducting business as Brush Locker Tools, Kauser Enterprises-USA and Kauser Enterprises-Pakistan, Khan, his father and brother received orders from a Pakistani company that procured materials and equipment for the Pakistani military, requesting them to procure specific products that were subject to the export regulations.

When US manufacturers asked about the end-user for a product, the defendants either informed the manufacturer that the product would remain in the US or completed an end-user certification indicating that the product would not be exported, Durham said.

Earlier this year, Khan's father, Muhammad Ismail, and his brother, Kamran Khan, each pleaded guilty to one count of international money laundering, for causing funds to be transferred from Pakistan to the US in connection with the export control violations.

Both have been sentenced to 18 months of imprisonment.  Ismail and Kamran Khan are both citizens of Pakistan and lawful permanent residents of the US.

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