Security News: Philadelphia Man Pleads Guilty to Conspiring to Distribute Narcotics and Money Laundering

Source: United States Department of Justice News

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – A former resident of Philadelphia, PA pleaded guilty in federal court to charges of violating federal narcotics laws, United States Attorney Cindy K. Chung announced today.

Jelahn Williams, a/k/a “Boog”, 27, pleaded guilty on August 9, 2022, to Counts One and Two of the Indictment before Senior United States District Judge Kim R. Gibson.

In connection with the guilty plea, from on or about July 5, 2018, and continuing thereafter to on or about May 5, 2020, in the Western District of Pennsylvania and elsewhere, Williams conspired to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine, 500 grams or more of a mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of methamphetamine, 28 grams or more of cocaine base, in the form commonly known as crack, and 40 grams or more of fentanyl and heroin, as well as, conspired to commit money laundering.

Judge Gibson scheduled sentencing for Dec. 14, 2022, at 1:30 p.m. The law provides for a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison, a fine of $10,000,000, or both, at Count One, and a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, a fine of up to $500,000, or both, at Count Two. Under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, the actual sentence imposed would be based upon the seriousness of the offenses and the prior criminal history, if any, of the defendant.

Assistant United States Attorney Arnold P. Bernard Jr. is prosecuting this case on behalf of the government.

This prosecution is a result of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles high-level drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs, and transnational criminal organizations that threaten communities throughout the United States. OCDETF uses a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies against criminal networks.

OCDETF conducted the investigation leading to the Indictment in this case. The task force is headed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Laurel Highlands Resident Agency and is comprised of members drawn from the FBI Safe Streets Task Force, Homeland Security Investigations, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, the Pennsylvania State Police, and the Indiana Borough Police Department.

Defense News: USS Boxer Holds Change of Command Ceremony

Source: United States Navy

Ellis assumed command of Boxer in Feb. 2021, and will go on to serve at U.S. Naval Forces Europe and Africa in Naples, Italy, as chief of staff.

As commanding officer, Ellis led Boxer through the COVID-19 pandemic and oversaw critical maintenance and system upgrades. Under her leadership, Boxer received the Naval Surface Forces excellence awards for maritime warfare and engineering, as well as the Force Health and Wellness green “H” award and FY-21 Retention Excellence awards.

“Boxer, I cannot adequately express how proud and humbled I am to have had the opportunity to serve with you over these last three years,” said Ellis. “This has unequivocally been the highlight tour of my career and I will always be proud to say that I’m a Boxer Sailor.”

Cieslukowski is a 1998 graduate of the University of Virginia and commissioned through the Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps program. He earned a Master of Arts degree in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. Cieslukowski has completed five at sea deployments across the fleet during this career. His first Commanding Officer Andand Executive Officer tours were on board USS Sterett (DDG 104). CieslukowsiCieslukowski checked in on board Boxer as Executive Officer in Feb. 2021.

After assuming command, Cieslukowski spoke of Boxer’s future and the confidence he has in the crew.

“I am humbled at the collected talent, dedication and skill of the Boxer family,” said Cieslukowski. “As I begin my time as Captain, I do so fully understanding my great responsibility to each and every one of you, our families, our country and the legacy of those who have walked these deck plates before us.

Boxer is a Wasp-class amphibious assault ship commissioned February 11, 1995 and is the sixth ship to bear the name. Boxer’s crew is made up of approximately 1,200 officers and enlisted personnel and can accommodate up to 1,800 Marines.

For more information or imagery for USS Boxer visit: https://dividshub.net/ussboxer/
Follow us on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/ussboxer/
Follow us on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/ussboxer/

Defense News: NAVSAFECOM’S Mission, Functions, Tasks Updated

Source: United States Navy

Coming on the heels of NAVSAFECOM’s establishment as a command earlier this year, OPNAVINST 5450.180G identifies significant new functions that reaffirm the command’s oversight of the Navy and Marine Corps Safety Management System (SMS) and strengthens its fleet-facing focus.

NAVSAFECOM serves as the naval enterprise lead for non-nuclear safety standards and expertise. The command’s mission is to preserve warfighting capability, combat lethality, and readiness by working with stakeholders to identify, mitigate or eliminate hazards to reduce unnecessary risk to people and resources.

The functions align with the four SMS pillars of safety policy, safety risk management, safety assurance and safety promotion.

Notably, NAVSAFECOM now has the authority to direct commands to take corrective action against identified unsafe practices and, when necessary, suspend specific activities until corrective actions are completed and risks are mitigated.

Additionally, the command will now conduct no-notice unit safety inspections and assessments to evaluate risk controls and self-improvement efforts. NAVSAFECOM will also review Echelon II and III certification processes of subordinate commands.

To help conduct the additional level of assessments, the command recently formed the Assurance Directorate, comprised of senior military and civilian employees tasked with assessing the overall effectiveness of risk and safety management practices across the naval enterprise.

“This instruction is our “North Star,” and the new directorate is hitting the ground running to establish Assurance Assessment protocols and processes,” said Mr. David Bussel, Director of the Assurance Directorate. The updated instruction “is a significant departure from our previous charge and indicates the Navy’s emphasis on strengthening our risk behaviors and aligns with the CNO’s ‘Get Real, Get Better’ initiative.”

Data collection, analysis and dissemination, remain a crucial part of the mission, along with continuing to collaborate extensively with the other services in safety, as we know that safety is not one person’s job, but the responsibility of every service member.

“Ultimately, this instruction formalizes what the command is striving toward,” said Bussel, “assisting commands in their ability to inculcate behaviors of self-awareness, self-assessment, self-correction, and continual learning in order to enable a defense-in-depth that ensures your Command is Safe to Operate and Operates Safely through proper Risk Identification, Communication, and Accountability at the appropriate level.”

For more NAVSAFECOM information or resources, visit the command website at navalsafetycommand.navy.mil.

Defense News: USS Leyte Gulf Underway for Deployment

Source: United States Navy

Leyte Gulf joins the guided-missile destroyers USS Delbert D. Black (DDG 119) and USS Farragut (DDG 99) who departed Naval Station Mayport earlier this month as part of the George H.W. Bush Carrier Strike Group.

Prior to deploying, the ship completed rigorous basic, advanced and integrated phase training of the Optimized Fleet Response Plan with Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 10 and Destroyer Squadron 26.

“We are excited to begin another chapter in the great legacy of Leyte Gulf alongside CSG-10 and the ships of Destroyer Squadron 26,” said Capt. Michael Weeldreyer, commanding officer of Leyte Gulf. “The crew is excited to work with our allies in the U.S. 6th fleet area of operations and build trust in the region while enhancing security. I cannot state it more clearly: America’s Battle Cruiser is ready to go.”

The ship’s crew is comprised of more than 40 officers and nearly 350 enlisted Sailors.

Leyte Gulf was commissioned Sept. 26, 1987, and commemorates the largest naval battle in modern history, fought Oct. 23-26, 1944. The Battle of Leyte Gulf was quintessential in turning the tides in the Pacific Fleet battle strategy during World War II and greatly impacted the Japanese’s ability to fight as an organized force.

“The crew is well trained and eager to demonstrate and utilize the skills they possess in support of George H.W. Bush CSG’s mission,” said Leyte Gulf Command Master Chief Jason Kutsch. “We are ready to sail over the horizon and then return safely to our families at the conclusion of what will certainly be a successful and safe deployment.”

A detachment from Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 46 will remain embarked aboard Leyte Gulf.

Leyte Gulf is the Air and Missile Defense Commander for the George H.W. Bush CSG and delivers superior combat capability to deter, and if necessary, defeat America’s adversaries in support of national security.

For more information about the ship, please visit Facebook or the official webpage. For more information about CSG-10, you can visit the official website or Facebook.

For more news from Naval Surface Forces, click here. For more news from Commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet, visit: www.public.navy.mil/surflant/hq/Pages/default.aspx and www.dvidshub.net/unit/CNSFUSAF.

Security News: Four Charged with $150 Million Fraud on San Diego Technology Company

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Assistant U. S. Attorneys Meghan E. Heesch, Nicholas W. Pilchak, and Eric R. Olah

NEWS RELEASE SUMMARY – August 9, 2022

SAN DIEGO – Charges unsealed today against four individuals, including two San Diego residents, allege that they defrauded a multinational San Diego technology company in its $150 million purchase of a tech start-up controlled by the defendants. 

Karim Arabi (“Karim”) and Ali Akbar Shokouhi were arrested today in San Diego, while Sanjiv Taneja was arrested in the Northern District of California.  A fourth defendant was arrested in Canada, where she faces proceedings to extradite her to the United States.

All four defendants are named in a superseding indictment, which charges them with fraud and money laundering offenses based on the quartet’s alleged scheme to dupe a San Diego technology company (the “victim company”) into paying $150 million for technology that Karim secretly created and provisionally patented while serving as a vice president of research and development at the victim company. The charges subject the defendants to possible maximum statutory penalties of 20 years in prison; fines of $250,000 or twice the pecuniary gain/loss for the fraud charges or $500,000 for the money laundering charges; and the forfeiture of property which constitutes or is derived from proceeds of the fraud offenses and all property traceable to such property, as well as forfeiture of all property involved in the money laundering offenses.

Per the superseding indictment, as Abreezio LLC’s CEO, Taneja marketed Abreezio LLC’s valuable new microchip technology to the victim company in 2015.  Taneja and his associates claimed throughout the marketing process that Abreezio’s valuable new technology was invented by a Canadian graduate student working in an unrelated field.  But no one disclosed that Karim—the graduate student’s family member, and a specialist in the same field as Abreezio’s technology, then working at the victim company—was intimately involved in Abreezio’s formation, development and marketing.  In truth, per court documents, Karim filed the provisional patents upon which Abreezio’s core technology was based; called and attended key operations meetings among the defendants and other Abreezio principals (but not the purported inventor); and choreographed key steps in the new company’s development—including the selection of Taneja as CEO and picking the name “Abreezio.” 

The defendants concealed Karim’s key role in Abreezio from the victim company because, as detailed in the superseding indictment, Karim’s employment agreements provided that his inventions during his employment would belong to his employer, the victim company.  By hiding Karim’s participation in Abreezio, the defendants were able to pitch the new company as “an angel-funded Silicon Valley based design IP start-up” entitled to a hefty fee for its valuable technology, while disguising the victim company’s own legal rights to the very same technology.

The indictment alleges that Karim hid his hand in Abreezio, in part, by creating sham email accounts to impersonate the purported inventor.  Karim, Taneja and Shokouhi even called Karim by the purported inventor’s name in some of their communications to mask Karim’s role. 

Abreezio also relied on Karim to provide important inside information about the victim company’s existing technology, to be used in honing Abreezio’s marketing pitch.  In February 2015, per court documents, Taneja emailed Karim asking for insight on the victim company’s “numbers” for comparable technology then in place to identify “the ‘threshold’ we need to cross at [the victim company]” and “help us calibrate our positioning going in[.]” 

The defendants also worked to hide Shokouhi’s involvement in Abreezio, per charging documents.  Shokouhi had been a vice president at the victim company as recently as 2014, and funded and supported Abreezio’s development via three different entities that he controlled.  One of Shokouhi’s companies was never disclosed to the victim company during due diligence, however—an attempt to avoid scrutiny, in part because the victim company had flagged conflict of interest issues with Shokouhi and the undisclosed company the year before the Abreezio sale.

In October 2015, the victim company purchased Abreezio for $150 million.  As part of the transaction, the victim company was told that Abreezio was the sole and exclusive owner of its technology, and that everyone involved in the conception and development of Abreezio’s intellectual property had been disclosed. In reality, the defendants had carefully concealed Karim’s role from the victim company.  As a result, the victim company paid nearly $92 million to Karim’s family member (the purported inventor), over $10 million to Taneja, and more than $24 million to two entities controlled by Shokouhi.

The indictment also alleges how the defendants laundered the funds they received from the Abreezio purchase, including via foreign real estate purchases and interest-free loans.

“Fraudsters cannot hide behind sophisticated technology or complex schemes,” said U.S. Attorney Randy S. Grossman.  “This office will pursue criminals and their laundered, ill-gotten gains whether they are hidden in a mattress or scattered throughout the international financial system. Those who steal from our community will face justice.”

“Corporate fraud is a serious crime with serious consequences, not only hurting the individual organization, but also impacting shareholders, as well as entire communities,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Thomas Ryan of the FBI’s San Diego Field Office. “Today’s arrests confirm that no matter how criminals try to hide, the FBI will work with our law enforcement partners to fully investigate these crimes – we will uncover the truth; we will find the perpetrators; we will pursue justice for the victims.”

“Intellectual property crime threatens our economic wellbeing, and this indictment demonstrates that we will pursue those who attempt to steal and profit from our nation’s innovations,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Darren Lian of IRS Criminal Investigation’s Los Angeles Field Office. “Schemes like this not only victimize companies, but also impact our U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and our Civil Courts. IRS Criminal Investigation is proud to work with our law enforcement partners to bring these defendants to justice.”

DEFENDANTS                                                                                          Case Number 22-CR-1152-BAS

Karim Arabi                                                                Age: 56                                               San Diego, CA

Sanjiv Taneja                                                              Age: 59                                               Cupertino, CA

Ali Akbar Shokouhi                                                    Age: 63                                               San Diego, CA

AGENCIES

Federal Bureau of Investigation

Internal Revenue Services, Criminal Investigation

United States Marshals Service

*The charges and allegations contained in an indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.