
Court documents allege that Abraham Golan, a former Special Forces commando, made millions by running an assassination program for the United Arab Emirates from his $7 million mansion in Rancho Santa Fe, a wealthy suburb of San Diego. Golan has been named as a defendant in a lawsuit filed by Anssaf Ali Mayo, a Yemeni politician who claims he barely escaped a deadly plot carried out by Golan’s team.
According to NY Post, The lawsuit says that Golan, along with former Navy SEAL Issac Gilmore, launched Spear Operations Group in August 2015. The two allegedly pitched a deal to the UAE to carry out “targeted assassinations” on its behalf, and Spear was reportedly paid $1.5 million a month, with extra bonuses for successful killings. The deal was allegedly arranged over lunch at an Italian restaurant at a UAE military base in Abu Dhabi.
Golan allegedly stated, “There was a targeted assassination program in Yemen. I was running it. We did it. It was sanctioned by the UAE within the coalition.” To staff the operation, Golan and Gilmore recruited former military members.
The alleged assassination attempt on Mayo exposes a politically motivated operation with serious legal consequences
One key recruit was Dale Comstock, a former US Army Special Forces member, who was paid $40,000 a month to lead the killing team. Gilmore was hired as COO of Spear in October 2015, despite having been removed from the US military in 2011 for accidentally shooting a fellow Navy SEAL during training.
By December 2015, the team was assembled and flew on a chartered jet from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey to Yemen. Their primary target was Anssaf Ali Mayo, who was at the top of the list because he belonged to the al-Islah party, Yemen’s second-largest political group, which has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, an organization the UAE considers an enemy. It is worth noting that the Muslim Brotherhood has never been classified as a terrorist organization by the United States.
Elite Special Forces commando at heart of $1.5M a month mercenary killing unit funded by royal family: Suit https://t.co/6hrTcNq76J pic.twitter.com/whREsY5XBR
— New York Post (@nypost) April 2, 2026
The plan to kill Mayo was to detonate explosives at the al-Islah headquarters in Aden, then shoot any survivors. Comstock allegedly placed an explosive charge packed with shrapnel and detonated it, followed by a second explosion from a booby-trapped SUV. Comstock reportedly said, “I was gonna try to open the door, throw a couple hand grenades, and then just go in there and shoot everyone.” Mayo, who had been warned of the threat, managed to flee moments before the blast and survived.
Mayo claims to have suffered “psychological and emotional trauma” and now lives in exile in Saudi Arabia, separated from his wife and children in Yemen, whom he sees only once a year since 2016. Golan allegedly ran these operations from his 7,000-square-foot San Diego mansion, which featured five bedrooms, five baths, four fireplaces, a resort-style pool, and a wood-paneled office overlooking a golf course.
On The David Hearst Podcast, former Saudi Shura Council member Ahmed Al-Tuwaijri said the UAE used foreign mercenaries to assassinate intellectual, religious and social leaders in Yemen who opposed the separation of the south. pic.twitter.com/223E74CACS
— Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) February 23, 2026
This case also comes amid growing scrutiny of the UAE’s ties with the US; the UAE royal family’s $500 million deal with Trump days before his inauguration has raised serious questions about the two nations’ relationship.
While Spear’s direct mission in Yemen reportedly ended in 2016, the assassinations in southern Yemen continued and became more frequent. According to the BBC, investigations documented over 100 assassinations over a three-year period.
American mercenaries had allegedly trained Emirati officers, who then trained local Yemenis to carry out killings, making it harder to trace the attacks back to the UAE. The tactics stayed the same: an IED as a distraction, followed by targeted shootings.
By 2017, the UAE had helped build a paramilitary force called the Southern Transitional Council, which operated independently of the Yemeni government. One unit, the elite Counter Terrorism Unit, was allegedly trained specifically for assassinations.
The UAE reportedly also recruited former al-Qaeda members into this force. Among them was Nasser al-Shiba, a former high-ranking al-Qaeda operative and known suspect in the attack on the USS Cole, who is now reportedly a commander in one of the STC’s military units.
Huda al-Sarari, a Yemeni human rights lawyer investigating these abuses, received death threats. Her 18-year-old son, Mohsen, was shot in the chest in March 2019 and died a month later. An investigation found a member of the UAE-backed Counter Terrorism Unit responsible, but no prosecution was ever pursued.
Mayo is now seeking compensatory and punitive damages, and a court order to stop the killing team from targeting him. Golan, Gilmore, and Comstock are all named as defendants. A UN group of experts stated that it “found reasonable grounds to believe that the United Arab Emirates are responsible for the 10 assassinations in Aden it investigated.” The UAE denied the allegations.
The nation claims it supported counter-terrorism operations in Yemen at the invitation of the Yemeni government and acted in compliance with international law. Meanwhile, the broader human cost of the Yemen conflict continues to grow, a retired US general stranded in the UAE recently pleaded with Trump for evacuation as bombs fell and embassies offered no help. The US government’s intelligence agency clarified that “the idea that the CIA signed off on such an operation is false.”