By Jonathan Dienst
POSTED: 3:53 pm EST January 16, 2008
UPDATED: 4:37 pm EST January 16, 2008
A former Michigan congressman was indicted Wednesday on federal charges in connection with a terror fundraising investigation in Missouri, Justice Department officials said.
Former Republican Rep. Marc Deli Siljander was charged with money laundering, conspiracy and obstruction of justice.
Investigators said Siljander accepted and laundered stolen federal funds in connection with his efforts to help the Islamic African Relief Agency-USA (IARA), a Missouri based organization accused of sending money to Pakistani groups linked to al Qaeda. FBI officials said the money transfers were designed to conceal the nature of the stolen funds.
The charges file alleged the money was being sent to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a warlord now believed in Pakistan who is a U.S. designated terrorist.
Also charged with Siljander, former officers of IARA including Ahmad Mustafa, Ali Mohamed Bagegni and Khalid Al-Sudanee, men who officials said have ties to Columbia Missouri or who currently live overseas. Five of IARA's officers had been charged back in March.
"This superseding indictment paints a troubling picture of an American charity organization that engaged in transactions for the benefit of terrorists and conspired with a former United States congressman to convert stolen federal funds into payment for his advocacy on behalf of the charity," said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Wainstein.
Siljander, 57, served in Congress from 1981 through 1987 and had been working in a Washington D.C. marketing firm. He also served as a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly in the late 1980s.
Justice Department officials said IARA officers stole USAID tens of thousands of charity funds and instead sent the money to the Pakistani group. Officials said some of the stolen funds were used to pay Siljander's fees.
Siljander is affiliated with Global Strategies Inc., which on its Web site described the former congressman this way: "Ambassador Siljander is uniquely qualified to engage the Muslim world. He is a student of several languages, including Arabic, Aramaic, and Hebrew, and has spent over 10 years studying the three Holy Books of the Abrahamic faiths. With over 24 years serving in the power circles of Washington and semi-official travel to nearly 130 countries, he has generated unique opportunities for frequent access to world leaders. These experiences have led him to develop a unique paradigm for the peaceful resolution of conflict that has been successfully applied in several challenging areas of the globe."
In 2004, the U.S. Treasury Department alleged the IARA organization was sending money to terror organizations. Calls and e-mails to Siljander's office for comment were not immediately returned.
http://www.wnbc.com/investigations/15064714/detail.html
POSTED: 3:53 pm EST January 16, 2008
UPDATED: 4:37 pm EST January 16, 2008
A former Michigan congressman was indicted Wednesday on federal charges in connection with a terror fundraising investigation in Missouri, Justice Department officials said.
Former Republican Rep. Marc Deli Siljander was charged with money laundering, conspiracy and obstruction of justice.
Investigators said Siljander accepted and laundered stolen federal funds in connection with his efforts to help the Islamic African Relief Agency-USA (IARA), a Missouri based organization accused of sending money to Pakistani groups linked to al Qaeda. FBI officials said the money transfers were designed to conceal the nature of the stolen funds.
The charges file alleged the money was being sent to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a warlord now believed in Pakistan who is a U.S. designated terrorist.
Also charged with Siljander, former officers of IARA including Ahmad Mustafa, Ali Mohamed Bagegni and Khalid Al-Sudanee, men who officials said have ties to Columbia Missouri or who currently live overseas. Five of IARA's officers had been charged back in March.
"This superseding indictment paints a troubling picture of an American charity organization that engaged in transactions for the benefit of terrorists and conspired with a former United States congressman to convert stolen federal funds into payment for his advocacy on behalf of the charity," said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Wainstein.
Siljander, 57, served in Congress from 1981 through 1987 and had been working in a Washington D.C. marketing firm. He also served as a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly in the late 1980s.
Justice Department officials said IARA officers stole USAID tens of thousands of charity funds and instead sent the money to the Pakistani group. Officials said some of the stolen funds were used to pay Siljander's fees.
Siljander is affiliated with Global Strategies Inc., which on its Web site described the former congressman this way: "Ambassador Siljander is uniquely qualified to engage the Muslim world. He is a student of several languages, including Arabic, Aramaic, and Hebrew, and has spent over 10 years studying the three Holy Books of the Abrahamic faiths. With over 24 years serving in the power circles of Washington and semi-official travel to nearly 130 countries, he has generated unique opportunities for frequent access to world leaders. These experiences have led him to develop a unique paradigm for the peaceful resolution of conflict that has been successfully applied in several challenging areas of the globe."
In 2004, the U.S. Treasury Department alleged the IARA organization was sending money to terror organizations. Calls and e-mails to Siljander's office for comment were not immediately returned.
http://www.wnbc.com/investigations/15064714/detail.html
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