Businessman Nazar Mohamed and his son, Azruddin Mohamed, were arrested this morning by members of the Guyana Police Force.

According to the Attorney General’s Chambers, the arrest was duly authorized by a warrant issued by a Magistrate of the Georgetown Magistrate’s Court.

The Chambers did not say which Magistrate.

Guyana Standard understands that the Government of Guyana received a request from the Government of the United States of America to extradite the two Mohameds pursuant
to an extradition treaty between the United States of America and the United Kingdom, which extends to and remains in force in Guyana under the provisions of Section 4(1)(a) of the Fugitives Offender Act, Cap. 10:04 as amended by Act No. 10 of 2024.

The request was received on October 30, 2025.

The arrest warrant was issued after a team of lawyers led by Terrence Willaims, KC, Herbert McKenzie and Celine Deidrick, Attorneys-at-Law presented to the Magistrate an Authority to Proceed from the Government of Guyana accompanied by an Application for an Arrest Warrant as is mandated under the provision of the Act.

The Mohameds are the subject of an indictment unsealed on October 6, 2025, by a United States Grand Jury sitting in the Southern District of Florida, which charges them with multiple offences including wire fraud, mail fraud, money-laundering, conspiracy, aiding and abetting and customs-related violations connected to an alleged US $50 million gold export and tax evasion scheme.

The indictment alleges that between 2017 and June 2024, the accused conspired to defraud the Government of Guyana by evading export taxes and royalties on over 10,000 kilograms of gold, using falsified customs declarations and re-used export seals to disguise unpaid duties.

The indictment further references the attempted shipment of US$5.3 million in undeclared gold seized at Miami International Airport, and the alleged under-invoicing of a luxury vehicle valued at over US$680,000.

The investigation into the Mohameds by U.S. authorities is understood to have originated in the mid-2010s, with intelligence and law-enforcement cooperation between Guyana and the United States dating back to 2016–2017.

According to the indictment, the alleged fraudulent scheme operated “from in or about 2017” through June 2024. In June 2024, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned the Mohameds and their company, Mohamed’s Enterprise, citing allegations of tax evasion, trade-based money-laundering, and gold smuggling.

The two Mohameds will now be processed in accordance with the extradition framework set out in the provisions of the Fugitive Offenders Act, as amended, in due compliance with the relevant provisions of the Constitution of Guyana and all other relevant laws, the Chambers said.

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