Final Defendant Sentenced For Role In Conspiracy To Defraud U.S. Department Of Agriculture

DOJ Press

Tampa, Florida – U.S. District Judge Steven D. Merryday has sentenced Ghasan Awad (60, Safety Harbor) to 27 months in federal prison for conspiracy to defraud and to make false statements to the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”). The court also ordered Awad to make restitution to the USDA in the amount of $654,502.28.

According to court documents, Awad helped to orchestrate a conspiracy to defraud and to make false statements the USDA. Awad recruited others to assist in submitting false and fraudulent representations to the USDA that a third party was buying a St. Petersburg convenience store that Awad then owned which was enrolled to accept USDA Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (“SNAP”) program benefits.  

Specifically, in 2015, after the USDA had prohibited Awad from accepting any SNAP benefit purchases and prohibited him from owning the store or even working at the store, co-defendant Bassam Al Saleh joined with his brother, Ahmad Al Saleh, and Awad to create false records and representations that Ahmad Al Saleh had bought the store and that Ahmad Al Saleh was operating it himself. In reality, Awad continued to operate and manage the store and continued to make profits from it, paying Ahmad Al Saleh a fee for the use of Al Saleh’s name as the owner of the store on USDA documents. In 2019, during the time that Awad was still operating the store under the supposed ownership of Ahmad Al Saleh, Awad committed numerous acts of SNAP benefits trafficking at the store. In those instances, Awad bought SNAP benefits from customers and paid for them in cash, in direct violation of USDA SNAP regulations. The court determined that the losses to the USDA and the SNAP program from the engagement of Awad and his co-defendants in this scheme to defraud the USDA was at least $654,502.84.


“The integrity of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is critical to ensure that assistance is available to those truly in need,” said Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Tampa Assistant Special Agent in Charge John Dumas. “The combined efforts of U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General (USDA OIG), National Security Group, St. Petersburg Police Department and Homeland Security Investigations stopped this fraud from perpetuating.”  

This case was investigated by the United States Department of Agriculture-Office of Inspector General, the USDA Food and Nutrition Service, and Homeland Security Investigations, with the assistance of the St. Petersburg Police Department. It was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Jay L. Hoffer.

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