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Writer's pictureDennis McCaslin

Seizure of prceedings for drug-related crimes nets $180,886 in cash for Department of Justice Asset Forfeiture Program





FORT SMITH — On August 6, 2024, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Arkansas ordered $180,886 in cash seized from three Nashville men to be forfeited to the United States, upholding a civil complaint by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.


The complaint, filed on Jan. 31, 2024, alleged that the funds, seized in an Arkansas State Police traffic stop, should be forfeited because they were the proceeds of or were involved in drug crimes.


According to court documents, this case began the afternoon of Jan. 17, 2023, when an Arkansas State Police trooper stopped a gray Nissan Armada for a traffic violation as it traveled westbound on I-40 in Crawford County, close to the Oklahoma state line.


During the stop, the Nissan’s three occupants were visibly nervous and made inconsistent and contradictory statements about where they were going and what they planned to do. All three denied having any drugs or large amounts of cash in the vehicle. 


However, 13 minutes after the initial stop certified police canine “Beau” arrived on the scene, and in an “open air sniff” alerted on the vehicle—indicating the odor of illegal drugs.


During the subsequent probable cause search, Arkansas troopers found two semi-automatic handguns, one of which had been reported stolen, personal-use quantities of illegal drugs and $180,886 in cash—most of it bundled for ease of counting.


The driver, Shapour Saberi, and his two passengers, Redeer Ali Haji and Aryan Rasul Ibrahim, were arrested by the troopers and interviewed by agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The guns, drugs and cash, along with seven cell phones, were seized from them as evidence.


Further investigation by the DEA revealed that Saberi, Haji and Ibrahim operated a thriving mail-order drug business in which they solicited customers to order high-grade marijuana and marijuana “edibles” through Snapchat, Instagram, and other social media platforms. Customers placed their orders and paid for the orders in advance.


Once a customer’s payment was received, often another co-conspirator in California would send that customer’s order by way of a common carrier such as UPS or FedEx, or via the U.S. Postal Service.


On other occasions, the three transported the high-grade marijuana and edibles from California to Tennessee using common carriers and, on at least one occasion, a rented cargo van filled with trash bags full of marijuana.


The three individuals also memorialized many aspects of their illegal enterprise on their cell phones which contained pictures of internet advertisements for known strains of high-grade marijuana, close-ups displaying the marijuana, pictures of price lists for known strains of high-grade marijuana and marijuana edibles, photos of packages and mailing labels, records of conversations with customers and suppliers, photos of drug ledgers, text exchanges with co-conspirators that included arguments over business matters and selfies taken by all three subjects.


Significantly, one of Ibrahim’s phones had photos of drug ledgers that included one dated “1/15.” In this photograph, the total profit shown on the drug ledger was $178,450—only $2,436 less than the amount seized from Saberi, Haji and Ibrahim on their Jan. 17, 2023, road trip.


According to court papers, Saberi, Haji and Ibrahim filed administrative claims with the DEA seeking the return of their seized funds, alleging “ownership of the assets were obtained legally without felonious conduct,” and claiming most of the cash came from car sales rather than drug distribution.


However, once the U.S. Attorney’s Office filed a formal complaint for civil forfeiture of the funds, complete with pictures of evidence gathered in the investigation, none of the subjects chose to challenge the forfeiture in court. Under the Department of Justice Asset Forfeiture Program, the funds—now in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service—will be used to compensate crime victims, support law enforcement efforts, and support communities.


U.S. Attorney David Clay Fowlkes of the Western District of Arkansas made the announcement.


The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Arkansas State Police investigated the case. The U.S. Marshals Service manages the Department of Justice Asset Forfeiture Program.


Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Mohlhenrich civilly prosecuted the case for the United States.



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