In SDNY Rhino Horn Case
Surur Pleads Guilty Asks Why His Cooperation
Is Not Mentioned
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
June 1 – Back on June
13, 2019 SDNY then-US
Attorney Geoffrey
L. Berman
announced the
indictment of
four citizens
of African nations
for trafficking
in rhino horn, elephant
ivory and heroin
into New York
and that
one of them, a
Liberian named
"Kampala Man," had
earlier in the
day been
arraigned in
the Magistrates
Court. Inner
City Press was
there.
On
December
11, 2019
assigned U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Gregory H.
Woods held a
proceeding in
the case, or
tried to. The
interpreter
was not doing
simultaneous
or even complete
interpretation.
Judge Woods
reminded him
this was necessary,
as he
translated the
defendants
request to
know the name
of the judge.
On June
1, 2022, Surur was
brought into
Judge Woods'
courtroom to
plead guilty.
Inner City
Press was
there and live
tweeted,
including Surur's
questioning
why his
cooperation
with the
government was
not mentioned
(his lawyer
said it was
just proffers
and will be
raised at
sentencing,
with a 70 to
87 month
guideline). Thread:
In
rhino horn
trafficking
criminal case,
now Surur is
pleading
guilty. Inner
City Press,
the only media
here in the
courtroom
Surur:
My lawyer told
me 70
months...
Judge:
But you
understand you
could get
life?
Surur:
(Pause) Yeah,
OK.
Surur: My
cooperation
with the
government,
it's not in
here. Defense
lawyer: There
were proffers
but no
cooperation
agreement.
We'll bring it
up at
sentencing.
Surur:
I facilitated
between buyer
and seller of
blsck rhino
and two white
rhino horns. I
wasn't the
seller. Also,
a kilo of
heroin.
AUSA:
Also the
Endangered
Species Act,
and laws of
#Kenya and
#Uganda.
Surur: I
didn't do this
in 2012. It
was 2017.
Guilty.
Judge:
Sentencing
Sept 14, 10
am. Adjourned.
Afterward, a
press release
that did not
mention the
proffers, nor
what Surur
said: "MANSUR
MOHAMED SURUR,
a/k/a
“Mansour,” a
Kenyan
citizen, pled
guilty to
conspiring to
traffic in
rhinoceros
horns and
elephant
ivory, both
endangered
wildlife
species, which
involved the
illegal
poaching of
more than
approximately
35 rhinoceros
and more than
100
elephants.
SURUR also
pled guilty to
conspiring to
distribute
heroin to a
buyer located
in the United
States.
Two of SURUR’s
co-defendants,
MOAZU KROMAH,
a/k/a “Ayoub,”
a/k/a “Ayuba,”
a/k/a “Kampala
Man,” a
citizen of
Liberia, and
AMARA CHERIF,
a/k/a “Bamba
Issiaka,” a
citizen of
Guinea,
previously
pled guilty on
March 30,
2022, and
April 27,
2022,
respectively
to conspiring
to traffic in
rhinoceros
horns and
elephant
ivory, as well
as substantive
charges of
trafficking in
rhinoceros
horns.
The remaining
defendants,
BADRU ABDUL
AZIZ SALEH,
a/k/a “Badro,”
and ABDI
HUSSEIN AHMED,
a/k/a “Abu
Khadi,” are
both citizens
of
Kenya.
SALEH is in
custody in
Kenya based on
a U.S.
extradition
request, and
AHMED remains
a fugitive."
Back on March
30, 2022, Kromah
appeared in
Judge Woods
courtroom.
Inner City
Press was
there. As part
of the change
of plea
script, Judge
Woods asked
Kromah of
his employment history.
Kromah said
he was born in
Liberia and
sold shoes and
used clothes
there until the
civil war.
Then he moved
to Guinea. His
CJA counsel
urged him to
keep it simpler.
He did, and
pled guilty. Sentencing
is set for
June 29, 2022
at 11:00 a.m.
See
also,
Greenwire's
E&E News
of April
5, 2022,
April 5, 2022,
"Alleged Rhino
Horn Smuggler
Pleads Guilty
After Years in
Jail," by
Michael Doyle,
"The guilty
plea was first
reported by
New York
City's Inner
City Press and
took place
without the
fanfare that
accompanied
the June 2019
announcement
of the
original
indictment
naming Kromah
and three
other
defendants."
On April
14, a
proceeding for
two remaining
defendants was
held, and
Inner City
Press attended
in person.
There were four
interpreters
- two Mandingo,
two Arabic -
and the
day's CJA
counsel from
Sullivan and
Cromwell, on
stand-by.
But
after denying
Cherif's
motion to
sever his
trial to avoid
being mixed up
in the heroin
charge, the
motion by his
lawyer to withdraw
was itself
withdrawn.
On April 27, with
Inner
City Press
alone in the
gallery, Amara
Cherif entered
guilty pelas
to Counts
1, 2 and 3. He
recounted
selling used clothes. His
sentencing was
set for August
25 at 10 am.
The case
is US v.
Kromah,
19-cr-338
(Woods).
It
is US v.
Kromah,
19-cr-338
(Woods).
Docketed
back
on August 19 was
Amara Cherif's
letter to
Judge Woods:
"I am
contacting you
to request an
official court
analysis of my
sentence
exposure,"
citing Federal Rule of
Criminal
Procedure
32(e)(1). The letter
is dated June
26 but took
seven weeks to
docket - as,
for example,
the letters to Judge
Woods from
FINCEN leaker
Natalie
Edwards should
also be
docketed.
On
August
20 Judge
Woods
denied Cherif
(no ruling yet
on unsealed
Edwards'
letters after
her
thanks they
were considered by
the Court) -
"Defendant
writes to
request an
official court
analysis of
sentencing.
ENDORSEMENT:
Application
denied. The
Court cannot
respond to
this request.
Mr. Cherif has
counsel and
the Court does
not provide
advisory
guidance to
litigants. SO
ORDERED.
(Signed by
Judge Gregory
H. Woods on
8/19/2021)"
In connection
with
Judge Woods'
hearing Inner
City Press was
contacted
and told that
Surur has been
ordered extradited.
We added it with
h/t, below. Now on
January
25, it's confirmed:
"Audrey
Strauss, the
United States
Attorney for
the Southern
District of
New York,
announced
today that
MANSUR MOHAMED
SURUR, a/k/a
“Mansour,” a
Kenyan
citizen, was
extradited
from Kenya and
arrived in the
United States
this
morning.
SURUR was
arrested by
Kenyan
authorities on
July 29, 2020,
in Mombasa,
Kenya, on
charges of
conspiracy to
traffic in
rhinoceros
horns and
elephant
ivory, both
endangered
wildlife
species, which
involved the
illegal
poaching of
more than
approximately
35 rhinoceros
and more than
100
elephants.
In addition,
SURUR was
charged with
conspiracy to
commit money
laundering and
conspiracy to
distribute and
possess with
intent to
distribute
more than 10
kilograms of
heroin.
SURUR’s
co-defendant,
Moazu Kromah,
a/k/a “Ayoub,”
a/k/a “Ayuba,”
a/k/a “Kampala
Man,” a
citizen of
Liberia, was
previously
deported to
the United
States from
Uganda on June
13,
2019.
Co-defendant
Amara Cherif,
a/k/a “Bamba
Issiaka,” a
citizen of
Guinea, was
extradited to
the United
States from
Senegal on
April 3,
2020.
Co-defendant
Abdi Hussein
Ahmed, a/k/a
“Abu Khadi,” a
citizen of
Kenya, remains
a
fugitive.
SURUR is
expected to be
arraigned
later today
before
U.S.
Magistrate
Judge Debra
Freeman.
The case has
been assigned
to U.S.
District Judge
Gregory H.
Woods. "
Inner
City Press
first reported:
Surur is
facing, and trying
to fight,
extradition, h/t
The
case is US v.
Kromah,
19-cr-338
(Woods). US v.
Kromah,
19-cr-338
(Woods).
***
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