With the approval of San Francisco German vice-consul E.H. von Schack, arrangements for funds and armaments were secured. Ram Chandra was to receive a monthly payment of $1,000. At the same time $200,000 worth of small arms and ammunition was acquired by the German military attaché Captain
Franz von Papen through a
Krupp agent by the name of
Hans Tauscher. In the meantime, Papen arranged for
Joseph McGarrity to make the necessary arrangements for shipping the arms purchase from
New York to
Galveston via the Mallory Steamship Company, an Irish-American shipping firm. From Galveston the guns were sent by train to
San Diego, where they were to be shipped to India via
Burma. However, Charles Martinez, a customs official who had arranged the shipment to San Diego, was not told of the true destination, and hired the
schooner Annie Larsen. For this purpose, an elaborate deception was hatched to convey the idea that the arms were meant for the
warring factions in Mexico. J. Clyde Hizar, a
Colorado attorney in charge of placing the arms on board the
Annie Larsen, posed as a representative for the
Carranza Faction. This ruse was convincing enough to elicit an offer of $15,000 from the rival
Villa faction to divert the shipment to a Villa-controlled port. For this purpose, Jebsen established a fake company to hide the true ownership of the ship, taking his attorney Ray Howard as partner. The
Maverick received a crew composed of sailors from two German ships interned at San Francisco. An American by the name of John B. Starr-Hunt served as
supercargo on the
Maverick, and was under orders to scuttle the ship if challenged by Allied warships. However, at this stage the plan started falling apart. The
Maverick, which was in
drydock at the time, could not sail for another month. Even during this time, rumours abounded that it was to be used to smuggle arms into Southeast Asia. The ship was searched a number of times by customs and security agents, who only found the ship's empty hold. Immediately before it left, it received an additional crew of five Indian Ghadar activists carrying fake
Persian passports. They carried with themselves large amounts of Ghadarite literature, and were tasked by Ram Chandra to establish contacts with Indian revolutionaries and arrange for the arms to be transported inland. Sailing from Acapulco, the
Annie Larsen made for Socorro Island again. However, in adverse weather, this attempt failed as well, and after twenty-two days Scheultzer gave up, choosing to make for the northern port of
Hoquiam, Washington. Returning to San Diego after failing to meet the
Annie Larsen, the
Maverick was directed by Fred Jebsen to proceed to
Hilo, Hawaii, where it was redirected to
Johnston Island by the German consulate for a second effort to rendezvous with the
Annie Larsen. However, this failed too and it was subsequently directed to
Anjer,
Java. At Anjer, a German operative named Theodore Helfrichs was instructed to dispose of the ship. However, it was seized by Dutch authorities. Starr-Hunt and four of the Ghadarites attempted to flee in a ship, but were captured by the British cruiser . Taken to
Singapore, Starr-Hunt confessed his role in the plot. ==Resolving the plot==