Admitted Violating Protective Orders on Several Occasions,
Plotting to Murder his Wife, Setting his Wife up to be Arrested as a Terrorist,
and Soliciting a Man to Burn Down His Restaurant for Insurance Proceeds
Baltimore, Maryland – Khalil Ahmad, age 51, of Hanover,
Maryland, pleaded guilty on December 12, 2018, to stalking his estranged
wife. Ahmad admitted that he solicited
another individual to have his wife killed after he violated protective orders
she had obtained against him, but that he ultimately paid that individual to
set her up to appear to be a terrorist and have her arrested instead. Ahmad further admitted that he paid the same
individual to burn down the restaurant Ahmad owned in order for him to collect
the insurance.
The guilty plea was announced by United States Attorney for
the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur; Special Agent in Charge Gordon B.
Johnson of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; and
Anne Arundel County Police Chief Tim Altomare.
According to his plea agreement, Ahmad and the victim were
married in July 2015. Before and after
their marriage, the victim lived in Howard County, Maryland, and Ahmad lived
separately in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
During their marriage, Ahmad threatened to kill the victim using a
firearm. In April 2018, the victim
informed Ahmad that she wanted a divorce.
On April 24, 2018, Ahmad threatened to kill himself. He drove to the victim’s residence, and in
the presence of the victim and her children, poured gasoline over his
body. Ahmad then produced a lighter and
threatened to light himself on fire if the victim did not take him back.
The next day, the victim obtained a temporary protective
order in Howard County against Ahmad, which was served on April 25, 2018, and
was effective through May 8, 2018. Ahmad
violated the order by contacting the victim by mobile phone on April 29, and
May 27, 2018, in Howard County. Ahmad
also violated the order on April 30, 2018, by contacting the victim by mobile
phone and by following the victim’s vehicle as she drove in Prince George’s
County. Criminal summonses were issued
in Howard County (two counts) and in Prince George’s County (three counts) for
violating a protective order.
To further harass the victim and put her in fear of her
life, Ahmad also contacted the victim’s relatives, members of her religious
community, and her ex-husband, and advised them that the victim was not a good
person and that she was having a romantic relationship with another man;
threatened to have the victim’s brother killed in Pakistan; and threatened to
have the victim killed if she returned to Pakistan, causing the victim to be
afraid to visit her family in Pakistan.
On May 8, 2018, the victim obtained a Final Protective Order
from the Circuit Court for Howard County that remains in effect through May 7,
2019. The order directed Ahmad not to:
abuse or threaten to abuse the victim; contact, attempt to contact, or harass
the victim in person, in writing, or by any other means; or enter the residence
of the victim. In addition, the order
required Ahmad to stay away from the victim’s place of employment.
Ahmad admitted that beginning in May 2018, he solicited an
individual (CW) to harass the victim. CW and Ahmad met several times, during
which Ahmad expressed a desire to have his wife murdered. Ahmad subsequently decided to have the victim
framed so that she would be arrested as a terrorist because she is from a Middle
Eastern country. The plan was to place a
ballistic vest, firearm, bottles of alcohol, and extremist jihad writings in
her possession, without her knowledge, and then notify law enforcement to have
her arrested.
On May 10, 2018, following several discussions with Ahmad,
CW reported Ahmad’s plan to law enforcement.
Thereafter, at the direction of and/or in the presence of law
enforcement, CW’s calls and meetings with Ahmad were recorded. Ahmad gave CW a total of $5,000 in cash over
two separate meetings, as a down payment to have the victim set up to appear to
be a terrorist. Ahmad also provided CW
with a photo of the victim, her address, phone numbers, and the last two digits
of her Maryland license plate number.
Ahmad made numerous statements to CW that he wanted the victim arrested
prior to his June 21 court date in Prince George’s County for violating the
protective order. If the victim were
arrested, she could not testify, which would result in the court cases being
dismissed.
The recorded calls and meetings reflect that Ahmad also
wanted CW to commit an arson at Ahmad’s business (Allah Rakha Restaurant) so
that Ahmad could collect the insurance payout from the fire. Ahmad advised CW that he recently had raised
the amount of insurance on the restaurant by approximately $200,000. During one of their meetings, CW and Ahmad
walked into the kitchen area of the restaurant to view the hot water heater and
gas line, and discussed how CW would set the business on fire to make it look
like an accident.
On June 5, 2018, investigators staged a scene involving what
appeared to be Anne Arundel County Police Department (AAPD) uniformed police
officers and detectives searching the victim’s vehicle on the side of a road. Photographs were taken of the victim’s
vehicle and provided to CW who then went to meet with Ahmad. CW showed Ahmad the staged photographs and
told Ahmad that it was done. Ahmad told
CW that he would pay $2,000 that day, but would pay the remaining $7,000 once
Ahmad could verify that the victim had actually been arrested. Ahmad then drove to a bank, withdrew $2,000
in cash, and handed the money to CW.
Later that same day, AAPD and FBI investigators went to
Ahmad’s residence to conduct a ruse, informing Ahmad that his wife had been
arrested and asking Ahmad if investigators could talk to him about his
wife. Ahmad told investigators that his
wife had filed a protective order against him and retrieved the file he had in
his home. Ahmad said that he had
overheard his wife on the phone at night taking classes about terrorism over
the phone and that his wife had attended a terrorist training camp. Ahmad agreed to meet with investigators at
AAPD to talk more about his wife, her activities, and her possible
associates. At the meeting at AAPD, an
FBI Urdu-speaking linguist was present for the interview. Ahmad was provided his Miranda warnings and
the FBI linguist translated for Ahmad.
Ahmad spoke to investigators at length about his wife. Investigators then confronted Ahmad with
recorded video of one of his meetings with CW, during which the two discussed
the plot to kill his wife, the plan to set her up to look like a terrorist, and
the scheme to burn down his restaurant.
Ahmad stated that he wanted CW to make things hard for his wife and to
engage in a romantic relationship with her.
Ahmad falsely told investigators that the plot to kill his wife, to set
her up to look like a terrorist, and the plan to burn down his restaurant were
all CW’s ideas.
As a result of his guilty plea to the federal stalking
charge, the Anne Arundel County, Howard County, and Prince George’s County
State’s Attorney’s Offices have agreed to dismiss their pending cases against
Ahmad.
Ahmad faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison for
stalking and is subject to removal from the United States upon completion of
his sentence. U.S. District Judge
Richard D. Bennett has scheduled sentencing for March 12, 2019.
United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI and
Anne Arundel County Police Department for their work in the investigation and
thanked the Howard County Police Department, the Anne Arundel County State’s
Attorney Wes Adams; Howard County State’s Attorney Dario Broccolino and Prince
George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy for their assistance in this
prosecution. Mr. Hur thanked Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Paul E. Budlow and Sandra Wilkinson, who are prosecuting the
case.
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