http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/12/16/ohio-imam-gets-just-1-year-in-3-8m-food-stamp-fraud/
Ohio imam gets just 1 year in $3.8M food stamp fraud
Posted on December 16, 2012 by creeping
#MyJihad
A few days ago we gave you five other examples of Muslim food stamp and medical fraud.
via Man in $3.8M food stamp fraud case sentenced | www.daytondailynews.com.
A few days ago we gave you five other examples of Muslim food stamp and medical fraud.
via Man in $3.8M food stamp fraud case sentenced | www.daytondailynews.com.
A federal judge on Thursday sentenced
Al-Idu Al-Gaheem to one year and one day in prison for his role in a
scheme that bilked $3.8 million from the federal food stamp program.
Al-Gaheem, the former owner of two Dayton View businesses and the imam of Masjid At-Taqwa mosque, was the second of four defendants to be sentenced in the case. All four defendants have pleaded guilty.
Al-Gaheem faced as many as four years in
prison after he pleaded guilty in August to felony charges of conspiracy
to commit money laundering and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, food
stamp trafficking and structuring transactions to avoid reporting
requirements.
Al-Gaheem, who previously was named
Lawrence Phillips, was the owner of Five Pillars Market, 1263 W.
Riverview Ave., and Riverview Cell & Cup of Dreams, 512 N. Broadway
St.
Al-Gaheem worked and conspired
with Abdul Yamini Sr., Abdul Qadir and Omar Yahya to defraud the
food-assistance program. The men illegally paid customers 50 cents in
cash for every $1 in food stamp benefits they redeemed.
Undercover law enforcement agents caught
the defendants illegally trading cash for food stamp benefits and buying
and selling products that are ineligible through the program, such as
counterfeit clothing and firearms.
Authorities estimate that more than 1,000
transactions took place at Five Pillars Market that involved the illegal
exchange of food benefits. The federal government deposited about $3.8
million into bank accounts controlled by Al-Gaheem and others as
reimbursement for food benefits redeemed at Five Pillars.
Al-Gaheem repeatedly withdrew large
amounts of cash from the bank account, but he always took out sums that
were just less than the threshold that requires the filing of federal
financial reports.
Al-Gaheem and the other defendants used
the money they stole to renovate the Dayton View businesses and pay for
personal expenses, such as rent, mortgage and other bills, said
assistant U.S. Attorney Dwight Keller.
Keller urged Judge Timothy S. Black to
give Al-Gaheem the maximum prison sentence to deter him from breaking
the law in the future and also to send a message that this criminal
activity will not be tolerated.
“Mr. Al-Gaheem is arguably the most culpable” defendant in the case, Keller said.
Al-Gaheem’s attorney James Fleisher argued
that justice would best be served by placing his client on probation or
house arrest, because Al-Gaheem is an important part of his community
and some family members depend on him for caregiving and financial
support.
Judge Black said although Al-Gaheem had an
“extraordinarily impressive” record of good deeds and charitable
actions, he could not ignore his role in the criminal enterprise by only
giving him “a slap on the wrist.”
Black sentenced Al-Gaheem to the same prison term that he handed down to Qadir in November.
In addition to prison, Black also ordered Al-Gaheem to be placed on three years of community control after his release.
Al-Gaheem and the other co-defendants in
the case will be ordered to pay $3.8 million in restitution to the
federal government, even though authorities doubt that they can even
come close to paying back the money they stole.
Yamini is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 20. Yahya is scheduled to be sentenced in late February.
From our 2011 post, Ohio Imam Defrauds Taxpayers of $2 Million:
Al-Idu Al-Gaheem, the owner of Cup
of Dreams and Five Pillars Market and a local imam, allegedly received
more than $2.5 million in food stamp reimbursements from the federal
government, between $890,000 and nearly $2 million of which was from
“unexplained” food stamp charges, according to an IRS agent’s affidavit
in support of seizing Al-Gaheem’s bank account.
For that he got 1 year. A lose-lose for taxpayers.
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