US cabbie convicted of plotting Pakistan ‘honor killings’

0
141

A New York cab driver was found guilty on Thursday of conspiring with relatives in Pakistan to commit ‘honor killings’ of family members of a relative he believed helped his daughter escape back to the United States.

Mohammad Ajmal Choudhry, 61, was found guilty by a federal jury in Brooklyn on charges of conspiracy to commit murder in a foreign country, transmitting threats to injure, and visa fraud.

Prosecutors said that for more than three years, Choudhry’s daughter, Amina Ajmal, was restrained by relatives in Pakistan at her father’s direction, and forced into an arranged marriage to help a man get a US visa.

With the help of a cousin and the US State Department, Amina eventually escaped and returned to the US in January 2013, prosecutors said.

Back in the US, Amina did not tell her father her whereabouts, but spoke with him in recorded phone calls.

In those calls, prosecutors said that Choudhry threatened to orchestrate the murder of Amina’s cousin if she did not return immediately to her family home in Brooklyn.

“I will not end this until I find you,” he said in a phone call to his daughter and threatened to kill the entire family of Amina’s cousin.

Four days after the call, the cousin’s father and sister were shot dead in Pakistan and a third relative was severely injured, prosecutors said.

In court filings, prosecutors said an eyewitness observed Choudhry’s brother “standing over the murdered victims, holding a gun, and desecrating the bodies.”

In a call that day between Amina and her father, Choudhry said he would “not leave a single member of their family alive”.

“My name is tainted everywhere, that I am a man with no honor. I have no place to show my face with dignity.”

Choudrhy was arrested later that day outside his house in Brooklyn. Neither his brother nor anyone else in Pakistan was charged, according to a spokesman for Brooklyn US Attorney Loretta Lynch, who confirmed the verdict.

“Choudhry placed himself and his honor above the lives of anyone who dared to thwart his plans,” Lynch said in a statement.

Choudhry faces up to life in prison at sentencing. His lawyer, Frederick Sosinsky said his client would appeal and seek to vacate his conviction.