US Appellate Court Dismisses Allegations Against Dahabshiil as Meritless

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The United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, cleared Dahabshiil, a Somali-owned international money transfer firm on Friday of allegations raised by one Harbi Hussein in an attempt to link the reputed remittance company to terror financing.

The case was initiated against Dahabshiil and its affiliates in the United States by attorney Joshua DArisohn, a partner with Bursor & Fisher, who represented Mr. Harbi, son of the late Somalia MP Saado Ali, the ‘estate of Saado Ali Warsame’ and other members of her immediate family.

The Plaintiffs-Appellants Harbi Hussein, Ayanle Ali, Maryan Ali and Riyak Ali appealed a January 27, 2017, opinion and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Caproni, J.) which dismissed their first amended complaint with prejudice.

The US appellate court upheld the January ruling of the District Court, deciding ‘that the order of said District Court be and it hereby is affirmed’.

The appeal court, upon deep consideration of materials and arguments presented by the plaintiffs and complainants/defendants (Dahabshiil) in the case, adjudged:

“Here, plaintiffs failed to raise a plausible allegation that defendants performed any banking services in favor of al-Shabaab while acting with the requisite mental state. In their complaint, plaintiffs assert that four transfers originating in Minnesota were made by defendants on behalf of al-Shabaab. However, the complaint also indicates that all four transfers were sent by individuals unaffiliated with defendants, who deliberately concealed the nature of the transactions by sending the money under false names, or to individuals with no public association with al-Shabaab. The remaining allegations in the complaint are highly generalized and do not contain enough detail to “nudge[ ] their claims across the line from conceivable to plausible.”

“As a result, the complaint does not provide a plausible basis to infer that defendants, either individually or collectively, knew or were deliberately indifferent to the fact that their services were used to send funds to al-Shabaab on any specific occasion.”

Realizing that the defendants could not be linked to Al Shabaab in any plausible form, the plaintiffs tried to smear the services of the reputable company in a mountain of unfounded generalizations, speculation and flimsy allegations that the court espied and dismissed as such.

“The remaining allegations in the complaint are highly generalized and do not contain enough detail to “nudge[ ] their claims across the line from conceivable to plausible.”

Summing up its ruling, the appellate court concluded “We have considered the remainder of plaintiffs’ arguments and find them to be without merit. Accordingly, the order of the district court hereby is AFFIRMED”.

Dahabshiil called the lawsuit at the time it was filed in the US in late 2015  “completely absurd and absolutely false.”

The statement went on to explain the mechanics of its compliance procedures: “We have absolutely no involvement whatsoever with the funding of terrorist organizations … Every customer [who] uses our services to transfer money is clearly identified and subject to a rigorous due diligence process before and during every transaction. We operate as a fully licensed and internationally regulated money services business with the full confidence of our banking partners.”

Similar, trumped-up charges have been raised against the company by a notorious blackmailer and extortionist – Dahir Alasow,  who misused his Dutch citizenship by abysmally using the amorphous umbrella of media freedom as a vehicle to exhort people of money, information or power.  He never concealed the part he played in egging the plaintiffs in the US case to file a case against Dahabshiil in the United States in order to substantiate his flagging, personal crusade against the company’s reputation.

Same as the final adjudgment of the US appellate court in the case of Harbi VS Dahabshiil,  Dutch courts had found Alasow’s attempts to defend his allegations to link Dahabshiil with Al Shabaab shallow, unsubstantiated and meritless on a number of occasions.

Dahabshiil has more than 24000 outlets throughout the world and is one of the fastest growing remittance companies in Africa as it is one of the most compliant in international laws regulating the money transfer, in particular, and the finance sector, in general.

Ref: HARBI HUSSEIN RIYAK ALI AYANLE ALI MARYAN ALI v. DAHABSHIIL TRANSFER SERVICES LTD DAHABSHIL INC DAHAB SHIL INC DAHABSHIIL PVT

 

 

1 COMMENT

  1. […] Accrdong to the appellate judge Caproni, J. of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York “, plaintiffs failed to raise a plausible allegation that defendants performed any banking services in favor of al-Shabaab while acting with the requisite mental state. In their complaint, plaintiffs assert that four transfers originating in Minnesota were made by defendants on behalf of al-Shabaab. However, the complaint also indicates that all four transfers were sent by individuals unaffiliated with defendants, who deliberately concealed the nature of the transactions by sending the money under false names, or to individuals with no public association with al-Shabaab. The remaining allegations in the complaint are highly generalized and do not contain enough detail to “nudge[ ] their claims across the line from conceivable to plausible.”Continue reading Dahabshiil Wins in US Appellate Court Against Baseless Allegationsas […]

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