Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Three face food stamp violations

- DAVE HUGHES

FORT SMITH — Three men pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to charges accusing them of violating the federal food stamp program.

Raja Khani Zaman and his son Haroon pleaded guilty Wednesday before Western Arkansas Chief U.S. District Court Judge P.K. Holmes III to conspiracy to traffic in Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program [food stamps] benefits, conspiracy to commit money laundering and filing false income tax returns.

Another man, Ahmed Zaman, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traffic in food stamp program benefits.

Following the plea hearings, all three were released on $5,000 signature bonds. Sentencing will follow completion of a pre-sentence investigat­ion.

They face up to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000 on the food stamp traffickin­g charge, 20 years in prison and a fine up to $500,000 on the money laundering charge, and up to three years in prison and a fine up to $100,000 on the false tax return charge.

Raja and Haroon Zaman had been under investigat­ion since July 2013 for food stamp activities at three Fort Smith convenienc­e stores which the

government said they were 50/50 partners — Fenny’s at 3515 Towson Ave., Park Mini Mart at 3601 Park Ave., and Grand Convenienc­e, also called Valero, at 4201 Grand Ave.

The government filed a civil forfeiture action over food stamp violations against Raja and Haroon Zaman in 2016 to seize $156,720 in cash and three cars belonging to Haroon Zaman.

Federal agents found the money in a January 2016 raid at Raja Zaman’s home. A search warrant affidavit said the money was found in places such as under mattresses, in sports coat pockets and in a Sponge Bob Square Pants tin container. The forfeiture case was dismissed in early 2018. The cars were returned to Haroon Zaman, but the cash was ordered held in trust to pay restitutio­n or a forfeiture judgment stemming from any criminal action that would arise in the case.

Plea agreements the three signed in August that were filed in court Wednesday said the food stamp violations resulted in a loss of $54,161 to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which administer­s the food stamp program.

The false tax return charges against Raja Zaman said he under-reported his business income for 2013, 2014 and 2015 by $344,817. Haroon Zaman under-reported his business income for those years by $327,522, the plea agreements showed.

The plea agreements listed multiple ways in which the men violated the food stamp program. They would allow food stamp recipients to use their food stamp cards to buy items prohibited under the program at twice the price of the items. They would take food stamp recipients, or send them, to other stores to use their cards to purchase items for resale in the Zamans’ convenienc­e stores, then pay the recipients 50 cents cash for every dollar they spent.

The government said the Zamans committed money laundering by reselling products in their convenienc­e stores purchased elsewhere for them by cooperatin­g food stamp recipients, according to court records.

The plea agreements listed 18 specific acts in which the Zamans violated the food stamp program. In one case, Jan. 16, 2014, according to the plea agreements, Raja Zaman took a confidenti­al informant to a local warehouse store and had him spend $595 in food stamp benefits to buy products for resale in the Zaman convenienc­e stores. Zaman paid the informant $250 for his participat­ion.

A government affidavit said one grocery store owner told agents he saw the Zamans making large soda and water purchases with food stamp cards, loading the purchases into a truck and driving them to the Fenny’s convenienc­e store and unloading them.

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