Los Angeles Times

L.A. tobacco distributo­r gets prison term

Sadiq Mohammed didn’t pay excise taxes on imported products, prosecutor­s say.

- By Nathan Solis

A Los Angeles distributo­r who imported tobacco products from out of state pleaded guilty to running a $3-million tax evasion scheme and was sentenced to more than two years in state prison, the California attorney general’s office announced last week.

Sadiq Mohammed imported tobacco products from Florida and Illinois and claimed the items were from California to avoid paying the state’s excise taxes, according to charging documents filed by California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta’s office. Those taxes apply to purchases of out-of-state products such as alcohol, tobacco and cannabis.

Mohammed then took the proceeds from his scheme and purchased more tobacco products, according to court records filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

Mohammed’s business, L.A. Trading & Distributi­on Inc., underrepor­ted sales to the California Department of Tax and Fee Administra­tion between 2017 and 2018, avoiding more than $3 million worth of tax payments, Bonta’s office announced in a news release Friday.

A Department of Justice task force uncovered the scheme in 2019 when state agents served a search warrant at a residence and found cashier checks payable to Mohammed’s business. The home’s location is redacted in court documents.

As part of their case, investigat­ors served a search warrant at Wells Fargo Bank, where they discovered that Mohammed “deposited or directed the deposit of proceeds from the sale of untaxed tobacco into one or more accounts, and then used the deposited funds to pay for additional purchases of untaxed tobacco” while he underrepor­ted his sales to the state, according to court documents.

Mohammed was arrested in November 2022 by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as he attempted to reenter the United States, according to the news release. He was extradited to California and has remained in custody since then.

Prosecutor­s initially charged Mohammed with 20 counts of filing false tax returns and money laundering, but on Sept. 23 he pleaded guilty to two charges of filing false or fraudulent returns.

On Wednesday, he was sentenced to 32 months in state prison and ordered to pay $3.04 million in restitutio­n, according to the Department of Justice. He has 387 days’ credit for time served, according to court records.

“When individual­s defraud and steal from taxpayers and the state of California, we will hold them accountabl­e,” Bonta said in a statement.

“Taxes owed to the state pay for services that our communitie­s depend on, and we will not stop in our efforts to track down those who put these services and our state at risk. We will find them and return the funds back where they belong.”

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? SADIQ MOHAMMED imported tobacco products from Florida and Texas and claimed the items were from California, the state attorney general’s office said.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press SADIQ MOHAMMED imported tobacco products from Florida and Texas and claimed the items were from California, the state attorney general’s office said.

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