In October 2004, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control designated the Sudan-based IARA and five of its senior officials as “Specially Designated Global Terrorists” for supporting
Osama bin Laden,
al-Qaeda, and the
Taliban. In March 2007, the Department of Justice charged IARA-US, along with five officers, employees and associates, in a 33-count indictment for illegally transferring funds to Iraq in violation of federal sanctions. In January 2008, the Department of Justice brought a superseding indictment with additional charges against IARA-US and its officers, along with new charges against
Mark Deli Siljander, a former
U.S. Representative from Michigan, for money laundering, conspiracy, and obstruction of justice. On April 6, 2010, Ali Mohamed Bagegni, a member of IARA-US's board of directors, pleaded guilty to conspiring to violate federal law prohibiting the transfer of money to Iraq. On June 25, Mubarak Hamed, IARA-US's executive director, pleaded guilty to conspiring to illegally transfer more than $1 million to Iraq in violation of federal sanctions, and to obstructing the administration of the laws governing tax-exempt charities. On July 7, Siljander pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and acting as an unregistered foreign agent, and Abdel Azim El-Siddig, formerly a part-time fundraiser for IARA-US, pleaded guilty to conspiring to hire Siljander to lobby for IARA-US's removal from the
U.S. Senate Finance Committee's list of organizations supporting terrorism. During sentencing, Judge Nanette Laughery concluded that IARA-US had no connection whatsoever with any terrorist organization or entity posing a threat to the U.S. by stating "This is not a case about somebody aiding a terrorist." The cases were brought by Anthony Gonzalez and Steven Mohlhenrich from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Missouri, and Paul Casey and Joseph Moreno from the National Security Division of the Department of Justice. On July 20, 2016, IARA-US itself pleaded guilty to transferring nearly $1.4 million to Iraq in violation of federal sanctions. As a condition of its plea, IARA-US agreed dissolve itself as a corporation for all time, and its board of directors agreed that it would not form a new corporation to conduct the activities that IARA-US formerly conducted. == References ==