He drove a Rolls-Royce and lived the American dream. But behind the Gucci was the ATF's most unlikely secret weapon. Sign up to The Crime Desk newsletter to read the explosive subscriber story for free

By Daily Mail (U.S.) | Created at 2026-06-17 20:31:22 | Updated at 2026-06-19 04:13:44 1 day ago

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Published: 21:06 BST, 17 June 2026 | Updated: 21:28 BST, 17 June 2026

Ray Khan drives a custom Rolls-Royce worth more than half a million dollars.

He wears Gucci, flies first class and threw his son a wedding weekend that looked like something from a Bollywood film.

To anyone who sees him around Savannah, Georgia, he is simply a wealthy Indian businessman who built a dazzling version of the American dream.

What they would never guess is that Khan - not his real name - faced deportation after being caught buying untaxed cigarettes in an undercover operation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), but was given a chance to stay by becoming an informant.

What followed was extraordinary.  

In an exclusive article, former ATF special agent Lou Valoze, who was Khan's handler, reveals how a soft-spoken businessman who had never touched drugs and knew nothing about firearms became one of America’s most unlikely - and successful - crime fighters.

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'Ray Khan', left, with his handler Lou Valoze, faced a federal charge and deportation but instead became America's unlikeliest crime fighter

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