Two Afghan heroin traffickers sentenced in Manhattan federal court for conspiring to import heroin into the United States
NEW YORK – Raymond P. Donovan, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s Special Operations Division, along with Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that Lajbar Lajaward Khan, aka “Haji Lajaward,” and Amal Said Said Alam Shah, aka “Haji Zar Mohammad,” were sentenced to 15 years and 131 months in prison, respectively, for conspiring to import large quantities of heroin into the United States and for distributing heroin intending that the heroin would be imported into the United States. Lajaward was sentenced on September 12, 2018, and Said was sentenced on September 17, 2018. Lajaward and Said pled guilty to a Superseding Indictment on June 26, 2017 before U.S. District Judge Kimba M. Wood, who also imposed these sentences.
According to the Superseding Indictment, other documents filed in this case, and statements made during court proceedings:
Lajaward and Said, two Afghan nationals, were part of a drug trafficking organization based in Afghanistan that produced and distributed large quantities of heroin. Between approximately May 2014 and June 2015, Lajaward and Said worked together in an effort to import large quantities of heroin – in the range of 1,000 kilograms – from Afghanistan into the United States.
In August 2014, Lajaward began communicating by telephone with an individual he understood to be a New York-based narcotics trafficker, who was in fact an undercover agent of the DEA. Lajaward, in sum and substance, told the UC that he was interested in supplying large quantities of high-quality heroin for importation into the United States, where it would be sold for millions of dollars. In the course of the calls between Lajaward and the UC, Lajaward introduced the UC to one of Lajaward’s heroin-trafficking associates, Said.
On October 30, 2014, Lajaward and the UC met in person in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. In the course of that recorded meeting, in sum and substance, Lajaward continued to express his interest in supplying large quantities of heroin to the UC for importation into the United States, and Lajaward offered to supply a sample of heroin to the UC as a test shipment to be sold in the United States. In the months following that meeting in Dubai, in the course of recorded telephone calls with the UC, Lajaward and Said arranged to supply a three-kilogram sample of heroin in Kabul, Afghanistan.
During those recorded calls, Lajaward, Said, and the UC agreed that the delivery of the three-kilogram heroin sample would occur in Kabul on or about January 15, 2015. On that day, an undercover Afghan law enforcement officer, acting at the direction of the DEA and posing as an associate of the UC, met with Lajaward and one of Lajaward’s associates in Kabul and received delivery of the three-kilogram heroin sample. In parallel, over 1,000 miles away in Dubai, the UC met with another associate of Lajaward to pay for the heroin sample, as had been arranged during recorded calls between the UC and Lajaward. At that meeting, which was recorded, the UC paid $10,500 to the associate, at the direction of Lajaward, for the heroin sample.
About two weeks later, on January 28, 2015, Said met with the UC in Dubai. During that recorded meeting, in sum and substance, Said discussed the heroin sample that the DTO had recently supplied for importation into the United States, stated that the DTO was prepared to supply 1,000 kilograms of heroin to the UC, and indicated that it would take the DTO only about 15 days to produce 100 kilograms of heroin for shipment to the United States.
On April 2, 2015, Said met again with the UC in Dubai. During that recorded meeting, Said and the UC negotiated additional details of the agreement for the DTO to supply massive quantities of heroin for importation into the United States, including that Lajaward and Said would share in the profits generated from the sale of the heroin in the United States. Said also agreed, in sum and substance, that he and Lajaward would meet the UC in Thailand, for purposes of finalizing the heroin deal, and for Lajaward and Said to receive their share of the profits generated from the purported sale in the United States of the three-kilogram heroin sample previously supplied by the DTO.
In June 2015, Lajaward and Said traveled to Bangkok, Thailand, to meet with the UC. On June 13, 2015 Lajaward and Said were arrested in Bangkok by Thai authorities based on the charges in this case, at the request of U.S. authorities. Lajaward and Said were later brought to the United States to face the charges against them.
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In addition to the prison terms, Lajaward, 53, and Said, 47, were each sentenced to five years of supervised release.
The arrest, conviction, and sentencing of these two traffickers can be attributed to the outstanding investigative work of the DEA’s Special Operations Division; the DEA’s Kabul, Dubai, Tokyo, and Bangkok Country Offices; the DEA’s New York Field Division; the CNP-A Sensitive Investigative Unit of the Afghan Ministry of the Interior; the Dubai Police Department and the Anti-Narcotics Unit of the Emirati Ministry of Interior; Japan’s National Police Agency and the Saitama Prefectural Police; Thailand’s Sensitive Investigative Unit of the Royal Thai Police Narcotics Suppression Bureau; Thailand’s Attorney General’s Office; Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs; INTERPOL; the U.S. Department of State; and the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs.
This case is being handled by the Southern District of New York’s Terrorism and International Narcotics Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Rebekah Donaleski and George D. Turner are in charge of the prosecution.
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