Mohammad Younis, Man Linked To Times Square Bomber, Pleads Guilty

Mohammad Younis

LARRY NEUMEISTER   08/18/11 08:17 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — A Long Island businessman pleaded guilty Thursday to an illegal banking charge, admitting that he unwittingly provided $7,000 to a Connecticut man who authorities say tried to set off a bomb in Times Square last year.

Mohammad Younis, 45, of Centereach, entered the plea to a single count of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, admitting that he acted as a financial go-between on April 10, 2010, passing along $5,000 in cash to a person he did not know and $7,000 in cash to another stranger.

A plea deal Younis signed with prosecutors said neither side will appeal a sentence that falls within a range of no jail time to six months in prison. It also said Younis is subject to a $12,000 forfeiture order, representing the amount of money he transmitted to the two individuals.

There was no mention at the plea hearing of Faisal Shahzad, the Bridgeport, Conn., man who drove an SUV to Times Square on May 1, 2010, and tried to set off a propane-and-gasoline bomb as the vehicle rested between a string of restaurants and a Broadway theater showing "The Lion King." The bomb produced smoke but no explosion.

Philippe Solages, a lawyer for Younis, said outside court that Younis was not involved in any terrorist activity.

With his client standing beside him, Salages said Younis "condemns the actions of Faisal Shahzad."

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the case demonstrated the lengths the government will go to when it investigates how terrorism is financed.

"Mohammed Younis engaged in illegal activity that, although unbeknownst to him, facilitated the funding of a potentially lethal attack in New York City. He was apprehended by law enforcement and as a result, a possible funding stream for terror attacks is now a dry well," Bharara said in a statement.

Shahzad was captured as he tried to flee the country. He pleaded guilty and is serving a life sentence.

Shahzad told authorities after his arrest that the April cash payment through Younis was arranged in Pakistan by associates of the Tehrik-e-Taliban, the militant extremist group based in Pakistan that gave him explosives training.

Younis remains free on bail after his Sept. 15, 2010, arrest by agents of the New York Joint Terrorism Task Force.

The government said in court papers that Younis admitted that he gave an individual $7,000 in $100 bills at a restaurant near a Ronkonkoma train station on April 10, 2010. Prosecutors said he was shown a photograph of Shahzad, a Pakistani immigrant, and he said the man he gave the money to resembled him, except for a beard.

According to the court papers, Younis "became visibly upset when he was told that the individual in the picture was `the Times Square bomber' and denied knowing Shahzad or having contact with him, aside from the April 10 meeting." Prosecutors added: "Younis told agents, in substance, `I paid the money, but I am not guilty for the bomb.'"

Younis, who lives with his wife and 12-year-old daughter, is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 30. The single charge he pleaded guilty to carries a maximum punishment of five years in prison but Younis is likely to be sentenced to little or no prison time.

U.S. District Judge John F. Keenan said at the plea hearing that Younis will likely be deported as a result of the conviction, but one of his lawyers said outside court that he hopes to stay in the United States, where he was working as a manager at a hardware store before he lost his job after his arrest.

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NEW YORK — A Long Island businessman pleaded guilty Thursday to an illegal banking charge, admitting that he unwittingly provided $7,000 to a Connecticut man who authorities say tried to set off...
NEW YORK — A Long Island businessman pleaded guilty Thursday to an illegal banking charge, admitting that he unwittingly provided $7,000 to a Connecticut man who authorities say tried to set off...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keezze
02:45 PM on 08/21/2011
mohamed i hope you rot in jail, thoe a beheading would be better, the sodomites will get u
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
msjimmied
12:45 AM on 08/20/2011
FWIW, most money from the Indian subcontinent is sent through the hawala system. It has been around for decades. It was extremely useful when there were currency restrictions that would not allow you to convert Rupees to dollars. A lot of money there is part of the underground economy or called "black money". If people there wanted to send money to the US it would likely be "black money" first, they would take it to an hawala agent who would instruct their agent in the city of delivery to hand it over..much like what happened here. This method of transmission is not at all out of the ordinary, but what it ended funding was. Knowing what I know, I would give Younis a pass on this, he probably had no freakin' idea what he got caught up in.
03:08 PM on 08/19/2011
If he isn't in jail or going to jail for his action, then lets hope he's deported.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nappyman
Hatred is gained as much by good works as by evil
10:27 AM on 08/19/2011
I see a western union commercial out of this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnniecjr
Truth, the socialists worst enemy.
07:55 AM on 08/19/2011
Sure, he didnt know what was going on. Sure.................................
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jlplummer1
07:20 AM on 08/19/2011
He provided the money for the attack, He's quilty..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nappyman
Hatred is gained as much by good works as by evil
10:26 AM on 08/19/2011
G and q are pretty far from each other on the keyboard. How did this little mess happen?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jlplummer1
07:37 PM on 08/20/2011
LOL....
07:12 AM on 08/19/2011
This is the only time this guy got caught. How many more money transfers have there been. This country is in deep trouble.
07:10 AM on 08/19/2011
This country is in deep trouble!
06:28 AM on 08/19/2011
Deport him. We do not want to encourage this behavior. If he leaves and his family comes to the state for welfare, send them too. We don't want to break up families.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Wilkes
Poet/Stage Actor
04:57 AM on 08/19/2011
He knew exactly what he was doing and was ready to lie about it if need be.
01:12 AM on 08/19/2011
Yeah right!! He gives money to a known terrorists group and what did he think they were going to do with the money? Build day care centers? DEPORT HIM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:56 AM on 08/19/2011
So he was helping a guy who hoped to kill people in Times Square and all we're going to do is deport him? I hope we empty his bank accounts first.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
12:22 AM on 08/19/2011
I am surprised that he was working the money transfer business when it is simple enough to get the licence to do it legally.
I wonder how they tracked him as the conduit. Perhaps the perp gave up that information.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Unca Allen
Tyranny will rise when you do nothing
12:49 AM on 08/19/2011
Uh.....................
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
12:01 AM on 08/19/2011
Yeah, who hasn't "unwittingly" given some stranger $7000?

The Religion of Peace strikes again™.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Unca Allen
Tyranny will rise when you do nothing
12:50 AM on 08/19/2011
I like it. Maybe both of us are members
11:41 PM on 08/18/2011
Ah is inastink.