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David Packouz (born February 16, 1982) is an American inventor, musician, former arms dealer, and subject of the 2016 American comedy film Arms and the Dudes. Packouz joined his partner Efraim Diveroli's arms company AEY Inc. in 2005; in 2007, the company won a contract from the United States Department of Defense to supply nearly $300 million worth of ammunition to the American-allied military of Afghanistan as part of the War on Terror. Due to a technicality involving an arms embargo against China, the U.S. government suspended AEY for infringing upon the terms of its contract, although the ammunition had been "serviceable without qualification". Documents showed that the company totaled more than $200 million in contracts to supply ammunition, assault rifles, and other weapons in 2007, despite the fact that Packouz and Diveroli were in their early 20s at the time. As a result of the publicity surrounding the contract and the age of the arms dealers, the United States Army began a review of its contracting procedures.

A musician, Packouz later went on to invent a critically-acclaimed guitar pedal drum machine, the BeatBuddy. Packouz's BeatBuddy became the best-selling musical item or accessory on Indiegogo, and one of its most successful campaigns ever.

Early life
Packouz was born in 1982 in St Louis, Missouri to a Jewish family. He is one of nine children, and the son of Rabbi Kalman Packouz, of Aish HaTorah. Packouz grew up between Jerusalem and Miami Beach; a good student in high school in the United States, his parents sent him to Israel shortly before graduating. He attended the University of Florida before becoming a licensed masseur.

Arms career and AEY
Packouz's friend Efraim Diveroli approached him to work for his arms company, AEY Inc., in 2005—Efraim was only 19 years old at the time, while David was 24. By the end of 2006, they had won 149 contracts worth around $10.5 million, accomplished by hours of scanning government contracts on the Internet and contacting foreign arms traffickers.

With a profit margin of 1% less than the industry standard, AEY Inc. secured a nearly $300 million U.S. government contract to supply the Afghan Army with 100 million rounds of AK-47 ammunition, millions of rounds for SVD Dragunov sniper rifles, and aviation rockets. The ammo that AEY Inc. had secured in Albania to fulfill the contract had originally come from China, violating an American embargo on Chinese ammunition.

AEY Inc. repackaged the Chinese ammunition, which the United States government constituted as fraud. The issue of the Chinese ammunition became the focal point of a months-long legal and logistical disturbance in the United States Army and the Department of Justice; AEY Inc. received much media attention, especially due to the age of the young Miami Beach arms dealers and their penchant for marijuana, earning them the epithet of "the stoner arms dealers" or "the dudes".

Diveroli was convicted of fraud in January 2011 and sentenced to four years in federal prison, while Packouz was sentenced to seven months' house arrest.

The story was published in Guy Lawson's 2015 book Arms and the Dudes, and is being produced into an eponymous 2016 comedy film by Todd Phillips.

BeatBuddy
After his arms dealing, Packouz went on to pursue music. He invented a guitar pedal, the BeatBuddy, the world's first guitar pedal drum machine. The pedal was first engineered and manufactured in 2014, after crowdfunding via IndieGogo as one of the website's most successful campaigns ever. The BeatBuddy has garnered numerous awards in the music world, from Guitar Player, Guitar World, NAMM, and others.

Personal life
Packouz has one daughter, Amabelle Jane, born in 2007. He is a musician, and lives in Miami, Florida.