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African General Pleads Guilty to Smuggling Cash into US


FILE - Guinea's General Sekouba Konate salutes after addressing presidential candidates and elections officials in this 2010 photo. Konate faces up to five years in prison for smuggling tens of thousands of dollars into the US.
FILE - Guinea's General Sekouba Konate salutes after addressing presidential candidates and elections officials in this 2010 photo. Konate faces up to five years in prison for smuggling tens of thousands of dollars into the US.

An African general who briefly served as the president of Guinea pleaded guilty Tuesday to smuggling tens of thousands of dollars in cash into the U.S.

Sekouba Konate, 51, had been scheduled to go on trial Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia on charges of bulk cash smuggling and making false statements. Instead, he entered a guilty plea that could result in a prison sentence of up to five years when he is sentenced in February.

Prosecutors say Konate tried to sneak more than $64,000 in cash into the U.S. on a 2013 flight from Ethiopia to Dulles International Airport. Konate had told customs agents he was carrying less than $10,000 cash.

Konate, who has family in the Raleigh, North Carolina area and owns property in the state, is general commander of the Security Forces of the African Union, a military force comprising 54 member nations. In 2010, he served as a transitional president of Guinea following a military coup.

Konate testified at a pretrial hearing that he did not understand the customs process because of language barriers.

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent testified at that hearing that they developed suspicions about Konate because of his property purchases in North Carolina and because they had received information about possible corruption involving Konate when he served as Guinea's president.

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