Altaf Khanani | |
Birth Date: | 1961 5, df=yes[1] |
Birth Place: | Karachi, Pakistan |
Nationality: | Pakistani |
Occupation: | Money launderer |
Children: | 5 |
Criminal Penalty: | 68 months in prison |
Criminal Status: | Imprisoned |
Altaf Khanani (Urdu: {{nq|الطاف خانانی; born 2 May 1961) is a Pakistani money launderer who was involved in moving money for terrorist groups and criminal gang groups.[2] After serving three years in prison he was released in July 2020.[3]
He was born in 1961 to a Memon family who were originally from Gujarat, India before migrating to Pakistan after independence.[1] His father Abdul Sattar Khanani was a street dealer and businessman.[1] He was the twin brother of Javed Khanani who was involved in Khanani and Kalia International fraud.[1] His brother allegedly committed suicide in 2016.[4]
Khanani's money laundering organisation was involved in the illicit international movement of money between, among others, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates, United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.[5] Among the methods used was the traditional Hawala system. Among others, the organization moved money for drug cartels, biker gangs, Hezbollah, al-Qaeda and the armed terrorists behind the Mumbai attacks of 1993 and 2008.[6] [7]
Khanani was arrested in September 2016 in Panama by the US Drug Enforcement Administration, and transported to jail in the United States. He was indicted in the US District Court of the Southern District of Florida on fourteen counts of money laundering in June 2015. In a plea bargain, Khanani pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiracy to commit laundering. His sentence included 68 months in prison, a $250,000 fine,[8] blacklisting by the United States along with his son Obaid Khanani and nephew Hozaifa Khanani, and his money laundering network has been designated as a Transnational Criminal Organization under the SDN by the United States Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control. Its addresses included Australia, Canada, Pakistan, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom and United States.[9] Khanani was released from prison on July 13, 2020.[10]