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NY Jury Delivers Mixed Verdict In Khat Smuggling Case

Issue 284
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Mayor Jiir Beats Up And Imprisons SLTV News Editor

Bittersweet Independence

Citizens’ Committees From 11 Districts Across Somaliland Meet In Burao To Discuss ILO Projects

Somaliland Now Centre For Illegal Female Cutting

Ethiopian Premier Admits Errors on Somalia

Bush hits dead-end in Somalia

Who’s Sawing Off The Horn Of Africa?

Africom: DoD's Shiny New Toy

US concerned by NGO arrests in Somalia

Regional Affairs

Media Watchdog Urges Somaliland To Free Journalist Abdirahman Muse Slapped And Arrested By Somaliland Capital’s Mayor

Ali Hussein Diriye - 'All We Have Is Freedom

Editorial
Special Report

International News

I Have Heard The Need For Change... Now Let The Work Of Change Begin

Somali Playwright Accused Of Molestation Fails To Show Up For Trial

Four Bouncers Charged With Attempted Murder

Africa: Cell Phones And Schools Help Improve Women’s Rights

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The Conoco Somalia Declassification Project

Book Sees Oil As Troubled Resource For Africa

NY Jury Delivers Mixed Verdict In Khat Smuggling Case

Somali Woman Jumps Off Burning Building

Former Cat Abdirahman Captures 10,000 Meters

The Name Of The Game In Somalia Is Oil

Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Boileau

Food for thought

Opinions

Has Somaliland Three Parties Or One Party With Three Names?

Somaliland And The 26th Of June

The Poisoned Cup

Abdirahman Aw Ali Farah: KULMIYE's Sole Lifeline

Congratulations
Rt. Hon. Gordon Brown, MP as UK’s New Prime Minister

What role would Ethiopia/USA play to tackle the Somaliland/Somalia issue?


NEW YORK, June 26, 2007 – A federal jury has delivered a mixed verdict in the case of 4 men accused of smuggling a leafy drug called khat to Somali immigrants in Minnesota and Maine.

Jurors convicted 3 of the men of conspiring to distribute khat containing just enough of the stimulant cathonine to make it illegal in the US. Two were also convicted of conspiring to import the drug but acquitted on charges that their actions constituted a continuing criminal enterprise -- a count that could have landed them in prison for 20 years.

A fourth defendant was acquitted on all charges.

Prosecutors portrayed the men as drug dealers -- but defense lawyers argued they were not because the active substance in khat all but disappears within days after it is picked in Kenya and Ethiopia.

Source: AP


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