Two men accused of being members of a Russian organized
crime group will face trial in the United States on Monday over what
prosecutors call an unsuccessful Tehran-backed attempt to kill an Iranian
dissident living in New York.
Federal prosecutors say Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard
Corps in 2021 hired Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov, members of a "Russian
mob" sub-group, to kill an Iranian American journalist and activist who
has spoken out against the Iranian government's treatment of women.
Amirov, 45, and Omarov, 40, have pleaded not guilty to
murder for hire and attempted murder in aid of racketeering.
Omarov's lawyer, Elena Fast, said in a statement, "Mr.
Omarov is presumed innocent." Amirov's lawyers did not respond to a
request for comment. In court papers, lawyers for both men have said it was
"inaccurate" to refer to them as members of the Russian mob.
Prosecutors have not named the target of the alleged plot,
who they have said in court papers is expected to testify at the trial.
Masih Alinejad, a journalist who left Iran in 2009, has told
Reuters she was the target of both the alleged murder plot and a previous
alleged attempt by Iranian intelligence officers to kidnap her and take her to
Iran.
Alinejad has brought attention to women in Iran protesting
laws requiring head coverings, as well as accounts of Iranians killed in
demonstrations in 2019.
"I am very excited to join the public trial as a
witness to testify against those who were hired by the Islamic Republic to kill
me," Alinejad said in an interview on Friday. "It's like I've been
given a second life."
The trial, before U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon, kicks
off with jury selection on Monday in Manhattan federal court.
The charges were part of a broader push by the Justice
Department during former President Joe Biden's administration to crack down on
transnational repression, or efforts by U.S. adversaries like Iran and China to
silence dissidents on American soil.
The two-week trial could provide a window into alleged ties
between Iran's government and criminal organizations prosecutors say it hires
to do its "dirty work."
A representative of Iran's U.N. mission did not respond to a
request for comment on the trial of Amirov and Omarov.
U.S. prosecutors in 2021 brought charges against four
Iranian intelligence officers over the alleged kidnapping plot. They are at
large, and Tehran has called the allegations baseless.
The alleged murder plot came to light in 2022, when Khalid
Mehdiyev - an alleged co-conspirator of Amirov and Omarov - was arrested
outside Alinejad's New York home with an AK-47 rifle.
Prosecutors say a Revolutionary Guard brigadier general
named Ruhollah Bazghandi began monitoring Alinejad in July 2021. They say
Bazghandi later hired Amirov, an alleged Russian mob leader living in Iran at
the time, to kill her. Omarov and Mehdiyev are also part of the mob,
prosecutors said.
Bazghandi was also charged, but is not in U.S. custody.
Mehdiyev, 26, pleaded not guilty to murder-for-hire charges
in February 2023, but the status of his case is unclear. Prison records show he
was released from U.S. custody on May 19, 2023.
Neither a Justice Department spokesperson nor a lawyer for
Mehdiyev responded to requests for comment.
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