• Airplane parts: In June, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Miami charged a Broward County man with conspiring to export military aircraft parts to Iran. Traian Bujduveanu, 53, faces up to 20 years in prison and $1 million in fines if convicted of violating the U.S. Arms Export Control Act and the U.S.-Iran trade embargo. He was born in Romania but is a naturalized U.S. citizen who for the past 30 years has lived in Plantation, where he cares for his blind mother, according to his attorney. Bujduveanu has pleaded not guilty, along with a California man charged with the same counts. Both are scheduled for trial in March.
• Made-in-China munitions: In June, a federal indictment charged a 22-year-old Miami Beach businessman with conspiring to sell Chinese-made ammunitions to Afghanistan security forces. Efraim Diveroli, president of AEY Inc., allegedly sent 35 shipments worth $10 million overseas and tried to pass them off as Albanian-made. But the munitions were from China, which violated Diveroli's contract with the Pentagon, prosecutors said. He faces more than 10 years in prison if convicted of intentionally misleading the U.S. government.
• Night-vision goggles: In May, a federal judge in Fort Lauderdale sentenced a woman to 29 months in prison after she pleaded guilty in a plot to send 3,000 U.S.-manufactured military night-vision goggles to Iran. Shahrazad Mir Gholikhan, 30, later retracted the plea and now is scheduled for trial Oct. 14. She faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Her attorney contends Gholikhan thought the deal involved binoculars.
• Russian helicopters: A Hallandale Beach businessman was charged in April with trying to sell 10 Russian military helicopters equipped with guns, rockets and bombs to an undercover federal informant who told the dealer they were destined for Zimbabwe. Military exports to the African country are banned. Peter Spitz, 70, owner of Russian Aircraft Services LLC, was first contacted last March about a potential helicopter purchase by the informant for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. According to court records, the informant told Spitz he was interested in buying seven MI-24 Russian attack helicopters and three MI-8T Russian military transport helicopters.