United States v. Hemant Lakhani

480 F.3d 171, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 6085, 2007 WL 778638
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 2007
Docket05-4276
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 480 F.3d 171 (United States v. Hemant Lakhani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hemant Lakhani, 480 F.3d 171, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 6085, 2007 WL 778638 (3d Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

AMBRO, Circuit Judge.

Helmant Lakhani appeals his conviction by a jury on five charges for his role in the attempted importation of shoulder-fired, surface-to-air missiles. 1 He received a sentence of 47 years in prison. Lakhani claims entrapment by the Government and a violation of constitutional due process stemming from its investigation. He also asserts error relating to juror misconduct during his trial as well as the unreasonableness of his sentence. We conclude that a reasonable juror could have found that Lakhani was not entrapped and that the District Court was correct in ruling that the Government’s law enforcement efforts did not offend due process. We also perceive no error in the Court’s ruling regarding juror misconduct or in the sentence it imposed.

I. Facts

Lakhani, now 71 years old, was born in India but resided in London. He was a trader (ie., a “middleman”) and didn’t limit himself in scope — groceries, rice, textiles, oil. In addition to these benign commodities, Lakhani also traded in weapons, which had become his primary business in recent years. Though arms trading carries sinister connotations, it can be a legitimate business. And indeed, Lakhani had previously engaged in legal arms transactions. In this case, however, he didn’t discriminate among customers, illegality notwithstanding.

Muhammad Habib Ur Rehman is a native of Pakistan and a professional informant. He began his informing career by working for the Pakistani government as it combated that country’s drug trade. Eventually, Rehman was introduced to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and then served as one of its informants on international drug trading and terrorism. Along the way, Rehman informed on one-too-many people, and his U.S. handlers were forced to extract him and his family from Pakistan. In the United States, where Rehman received asylum, he continued working as an informant for the DEA and, then, the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Rehman estimates that he has received about $400,000 from the Government in his 19 years of informing. For reasons unclear, Rehman was deemed “untrustworthy” in July 2001 and let go from Government service. 2

*175 Abdul Qayyum is a suspected terrorist now living in Dubai, U.A.E., and is believed to have been involved in a series of 1993 bombings in India known as the “Mumbai blasts.” He apparently knew Lakhani from a run-in with one of Lakha-ni’s former officemates. Qayyum met Rehman in the early summer of 2001 through long-time family contacts. At the time, Rehman, who was still working as an informant for the FBI, told Qayyum that “in America I am a powerful person. And if you need any type of assistance or help I am ready to give [it to] you.”

Shortly after the September 11th attacks in 2001, Qayyum told Rehman about Lakhani. The subject of Lakhani’s arms trading was raised, but Qayyum did not ask Rehman to pursue anything in that regard. Shortly thereafter, though, Lak-hani spoke with Rehman. In their initial conversation, Lakhani explained that Qay-yum had told him Rehman “was a powerful person in America, [and] if you need any stuff, if you want to do any business[,] you can contact this man.” Rehman affirmed Qayyum’s statement and offered that if Lakhani “want[ed] to buy something from America ... [,] I can help you.” The two also discussed Lakhani’s many businesses, including arms trading.

Rehman communicated with the FBI that same day and was once again put into Government employ in an undercover operation. 3 Rehman held himself out to Lak-hani as a representative of the Ogaden Liberation Front. The OLF is an actual, Somalia-based terrorist group that operates in East Africa and the Middle East. If Lakhani did not know this fact already, Rehman made him aware of it in their conversations. Rehman told Lakhani that the OLF needed weapons and asked to use Lakhani’s services. Lakhani agreed, and thus began a 22-month odyssey spanning oceans and continents. Rather than recount the tale in tedium, we relate only the significant events and themes that emerge from the record. 4

In the -initial recorded meetings and conversations between Rehman and Lakhani, Rehman said that the OLF was interested in many types of armaments, and Lakhani always responded with assurances such as “They are available,” or “I will obtain it.” 5 Rehman eventually made known that the “main thing” the OLF needed from Lakha-ni was shoulder-fired (“Stinger”) missiles; At the inception of the scheme, Lakhani perhaps thought that Rehman wanted the missiles for use in Africa, but over time it became clear that an attack on civilian airliners in the United States was also one of Rehman’s goals. At no time could Lak-hani have reasonably thought that the proposed arms deal was legal, 6 and there was *176 never doubt that the missiles were to be shipped into the United States.

Lakhani endorsed the deal enthusiastically, often speaking about it as the beginning of a long-term, arms-trading relationship with Rehman. At first, though, Lakhani thought the requested quantity of missiles too low to be worth his while and pressed Rehman on the issue. The two eventually worked out an agreement whereby Lakhani would first import one missile as a sample, with the expectation that larger orders would follow.

Lakhani’s search for a missile supplier apparently began with a company called Ukrspetsexport, a state-owned arms manufacturer in Ukraine with which he previously had done legitimate deals. During the course of the investigation, Lakhani spoke often of his arms-related connections in the Ukraine and made about a dozen self-finaneéd trips to the country. Every time Rehman inquired about Lak-hani’s progress' — and it was regularly— Lakhani assured him that the missile would soon be available, often as soon as the next week. It never happened.

To be sure, though, something was happening on Lakhani’s end of the deal. Several times he faxed information to Rehman detailing the specifications for the IGLA missile system, which is the Russian counterpart to the American Stinger missile. One such fax was sent by Laberia Co., Ltd, and quoted a price of $87,000 per missile. Laberia is based in Cyprus and has offices in Kiev and Moscow. Lakhani was steered to Laberia by Ukrspetsexport because, he said, it is involved in the darker side of international arms trading. Lakhani reported that he saw “the merchandise” on one of his many visits to the Ukraine.

Lakhani eventually began to press Reh-man for a down-payment on the missile, but Rehman could not produce it because the FBI had not yet made money arrangements. This caused Lakhani obvious frustration: “If you want to leave it {the deal], I don’t mind.... Yes, I have spent too much time. How many times I went there.” The FBI finally gave Rehman the money, though, and Lakhani told him how to send it along so that it would look “clean” once it got to London.

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Bluebook (online)
480 F.3d 171, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 6085, 2007 WL 778638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hemant-lakhani-ca3-2007.