Guilty Plea in Missile Parts Smuggling Case - Los Angeles Times
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Guilty Plea in Missile Parts Smuggling Case

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From a Times Staff Writer

A former executive of an aerospace defense company Friday pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge in a scheme to smuggle components of a sophisticated U.S. missile system to Egypt.

James Huffman, 47, of Lexington, Ohio, Midwest marketing representative for Teledyne, McCormick, Selph until his arrest last June, entered the plea to a charge of conspiring to export restricted munitions.

In a plea bargain with federal prosecutors, other charges in a 12-count indictment were dropped. Huffman, who faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 27.

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Guilty Plea

A co-conspirator in the case, rocket scientist Abdelkader Helmy, a native of Egypt who is a naturalized American citizen, pleaded guilty in a plea bargain June 9 to a single count of attempting to smuggle the highly secret missile components to Egypt a year ago aboard an Egyptian military cargo plane.

Missile components in the case, prosecutors said, included such high-tech items as a heat-resistant carbon fabric with low radar detectability that is used in rocket nose cones and super-secret stealth aircraft, a synthetic rubber used in rocket fuels and two swept-back parabolic UHF antennas.

Actual shipment was thwarted by U.S. Customs Service agents, federal authorities have said. Two Egyptians, Col. Hussam Al-Din Khairat and Fuad Algamal, were also indicted but claimed diplomatic immunity and have left the country.

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Federal prosecutors charged that Huffman was in charge of procuring components of the missile system for export and Helmy, a former Aerojet Solid Propulsion Co. research engineer, was the “technical expert.â€

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