http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2011/02/25/v-print/1886604/former-nj-man-fac
es-federal-terror.html

 

 

PHILADELPHIA -- A former Camden County, N.J., resident extradited from
Paraguay this week on charges of helping to finance the extremist group
Hezbollah made his initial appearance Friday in U.S. District Court in
Philadelphia.

Moussa Ali Hamdan, 38, a Lebanese native who for a time lived in a
$600-a-month efficiency apartment in West Collingswood, was indicted in
Philadelphia in 2009 along with nine other alleged Hezbollah operatives and
sympathizers. The indictments were part of a four-year probe led by the
FBI's Philadelphia Joint Terrorism Task Force in which more than two-dozen
suspects were indicted and arrested in sweeps from Philadelphia to Michigan.

According to court records, Hamdan, a naturalized U.S. citizen, introduced
undercover agents and informants to high-level Hezbollah operatives seeking
to purchase assault weapons to be shipped overseas.

Hamdan fled the U.S. in 2009, shortly before he was indicted, authorities
said. In June, investigators tracked him to Ciudad del Este, a violent
region along the Paraguay border known as a Hezbollah hotbed. He was held in
Paraguay until Thursday when he was flown on a U.S. government plane to
Washington and then quickly transported to Philadelphia.

In Friday's brief hearing, Hamdan, handcuffed and wearing a green prison
jumpsuit, appeared jittery and nervous, telling Magistrate Timothy Rice he
could not afford an attorney since "friends" had stolen most of his savings
while he was in Paraguay. Hamdan was held pending a detention hearing next
week.

"These are certainly serious allegations," Hamdan's court-appointed
attorney, Jeff Lindy, said afterward. Lindy said his client was "scared and
looked as if had been crying" before the hearing.

Hamdan worked as a carpet installer in Cinnaminson in 2007 and 2008, and
operated a low-end car dealership along Route 130. During that period, he
bought more than $154,000 worth of what he thought were stolen electronics
and cars from undercover agents, authorities said. Many of the meetings took
place in the Deptford Mall parking lot. Hamdan smuggled some of the
merchandise to be sold overseas to benefit Hezbollah, the indictment said.

The investigation provided a rare glimpse into Hezbollah's international
fundraising and weapons buying operations, experts said.

According to the indictment, Hamdan helped arrange a deal where a Hezbollah
operative would sell an informant $1 million in counterfeit money. The first
installment of the fake cash, about $10,000, was mailed to Philadelphia
hidden in photo albums, the indictment said.

The high-level operatives also sought to buy 1,200 Colt M4 machine guns from
undercover agents, authorities said.

Among the others indicted in 2009 was Dani Tarraf of Slovakia, an alleged
Hezbollah weapons-procurement officer who authorities say gave undercover
agents a $20,000 down payment for Stinger anti-aircraft missiles. He was
arrested in Philadelphia in 2009 and has since pleaded not guilty.

If convicted on all charges, Hamdan faces 260 years in prison.

 

 



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