FBI Seal Federal Bureau of Investigation Links to FBI home page, site map and Frequently asked questions
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Home Site Map FAQs Skip to Main Content

Contact Us

Bullet Your Local FBI Office
Bullet Overseas Offices
Bullet Submit a Crime Tip
Bullet Report Internet Crime
Bullet More Contacts
Learn About Us
Bullet Quick Facts
Bullet What We Investigate
Bullet Natl. Security Branch
Bullet Information Technology
Bullet Fingerprints & Training
Bullet Laboratory Services
Bullet Reports & Publications
Bullet History
Bullet More About Us
Get Our News
Bullet Press Room
Bullet E-mail Updates Red Envelope
Bullet News Feeds XML Icon
Be Crime Smart
Bullet Wanted by the FBI
Bullet More Protections
Use Our Resources
Bullet For Law Enforcement
Bullet For Communities
Bullet For Researchers
Bullet More Services 
Visit Our Kids' Page
Apply for a Job
 
Organized Crime

Middle Eastern Criminal Enterprises

Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, we have taken a new look at the various threats originating in the Middle East and from Middle Eastern communities in the U.S. Contrary to a prevailing notion prior to 9/11, the FBI and law enforcement in general have come to recognize that some Middle Eastern criminal groups have no nexus to terror. Instead, these groups have the same goals as any traditional organized crime ring—to make money through illegal activities.

The groups have been active in the U.S. since the 1970s in areas with significant Middle Eastern or Southwest Asian populations. These organizations are typically loosely organized theft or financial fraud rings formed along familial or tribal lines. They typically use small storefronts as bases for criminal operations.

What kinds of crime schemes do these enterprises engage in? Many kinds: automobile theft, financial fraud, money laundering, interstate transportation of stolen property, smuggling, drug trafficking, document fraud, health care fraud, identity fraud, cigarette smuggling, and the theft and redistribution of infant formula. These enterprises rely on extensive networks of international criminal associates and can be highly sophisticated in their criminal operations. Organizations often engage in joint criminal ventures with one another.

In the U.S., Middle Eastern Criminal Enterprises are most prevalent in Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey, and New York. Internationally, they thrive in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and Canada.

Middle Eastern Criminal Enterprises include criminals from Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.

Organized Crime home