Pak man sentenced to 7 years in jail in money laundering case

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

A Pakistani terrorist belonging to banned terror group Al-Badr, was today sentenced to seven years rigorous imprisonment by a in a money laundering case, the (ED) said.

The terrorist has been identified as Mohammed Fahad Hai (35) alias Mohammed Koya alias Neduthani and holds a Master of Science degree in analytical chemistry.


He hails from the port city of where his family still lives. His mother is a teacher, a senior official said quoting Hai's statement given to the central probe agency earlier.

This is the first case of conviction and sentencing involving a terrorist under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

The probe agency said in a statement that the of Principal City, Civil and Sessions Judge Basavaraj S Sappannavar "convicted Mohammed Fahad Hai under section 4 of the and sentenced him to seven years rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs 10,000".

An amount of Rs 90,470, in the name of Hai, has also been "confiscated" under the after it was attached by the ED earlier.

The case dates to 2006 when the Mysore police, based on inputs that Pak-based terrorists were planning a strike in the city, intercepted two persons on a bike on the night of October 26 that year.

The policemen on-duty challenged the duo and sought to frisk them after which the man on the pillion, which was Hai, took out a rifle from a bag and fired at them, the prosecution said.

The police team soon overpowered the duo, the other being Mohammed Ali Hussain, a resident of Pakistan.

"On enquiry it was revealed that they are active members of the banned Al-Badr organisation and had entered India without valid travel documents and were in the possession of an AK-47 rifle, pistol, live bullets, mobile and satellite phones," the ED said.

The ED subsequently booked a case against Hai and filed a charge sheet in 2010 after which the case went for trial.

The was enacted in 2002 and implemented from 2005 to check serious crimes of tax evasion, generation of and money laundering.

The first conviction under the in the country had come in January this year when a Ranchi convicted former Jharkhand Minister Hari Narayan Rai and sentenced him to seven years rigorous imprisonment and fined Rs 5 lakh.

In March, a man identified Alauddin was convicted in money laundering case relating to illegal possession of narcotic drugs by a Kolkata

The stringent anti-money laundering law allows a maximum of seven years of imprisonment and a fine.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)