A woman says she wants to wants to "start a conversation" about afro hair, including the challenge of finding a salon that caters for black and mixed heritage people.
Although he was careful to keep Mr Ahmad's name off the paperwork, officers in the National Terrorist Financial Investigation Unit tracked the money to Ojiri and, in April 2023, police arrested him.On the same day the Treasury sanctioned Mr Ahmad and banned him from travelling to the UK.
The US authorities also charged Mr Ahmad with defrauding the US and foreign governments, money laundering and sanctions evasion, claiming companies connected to him had been engaged in more than $400m worth of financial transactions between 2020 and 2022.As part of the American case, the Met police arrested a man living in Hayes, west London, for extradition to the US. Sundar Nagarajan is now awaiting trial in New York, accused of acting as Mr Ahmad's accountant and advisor.At first, Ochuko Ojiri refused to answer police questions, but in a prepared statement he said he had no reason to believe Mr Ahmad was a terrorist and money launderer.
But evidence seized from his phone showed he had researched who Mr Ahmad was and knew he had been sanctioned by the US. A colleague had even messaged to warn him against doing business with Mr Ahmad.At today's sentencing hearing Lyndon Harris, for the prosecution, said "analysis of Ojiri's phone revealed Mr Ahmad was in his contacts as 'Moss Collector', a name deliberately chosen to disguise the art collector as one of his contacts."
The Old Bailey heard how Mr Ahmad had sent Ojiri messages on email and Instagram. "The defendant engaged in sales discussions and sales with Nazem Ahmad and his associates" over a 14-month period.
He explained how Ojiri's arrest came after people working in the art market were brought into the regulated sector in 2020, meaning they were bound by anti-money laundering and terrorist financing measures to report suspicious transactions or face prosecution.Speaking on the steps outside court after sentencing, Ms Kohli said: "The death of my dad has left a hole in our family.
"A hole that can never be filled because of the actions of two teenagers."I believe that on that day the two teenagers made a choice; the boy chose to attack my dad and the girl chose to film my dad's attack.
"I feel angry and disappointed by the sentenced passed as it does not reflect the severity."She added that, after the boy and girl have served their sentences, "they still have life ahead of them".