Latest News

Two people convicted of plotting to kill a journalist in the US with Iran's support

Prosecutors claim Iran paid $500,000 to hit a journalist

Two Russian mobsters are due to be sentenced in September

The case was part of a crackdown on "transnational repression"

By Luc Cohen

NEW YORK - On March 21, two men convicted by the U.S. Attorney General of belonging to a Russian crime organization were convicted for their involvement in a failed plot by Iran to assassinate a prominent New York dissident journalist.

Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarova were found guilty of murder-for hire on Thursday by a jury at the Manhattan federal court. The charges included the assassination of Masih Alinejad in 2022, a U.S. Iranian and outspoken critic to Tehran's treatment of women and their treatment in Iran.

Elena Fast, an attorney for Omarov said that she respected the verdict of the jury but would appeal. Amirov's lawyers did not respond when asked for comments.

The Justice Department was waging a campaign against what they call transnational repression - the targeting of political opponents by authoritarian regimes on foreign soil.

The prosecution said that Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard Corps had paid Amirov, Omarov and $500,000 to cover the failed hit on Alinejad. She fled Iran in 2009

A representative from the Tehran mission at the United Nations has not responded to a comment request. Iran has denied allegations that its intelligence officers tried to kidnap Alinejad.

The jury heard from Khalid Mehdiyev who, in July 2022, staked out Alinejad’s Brooklyn house.

The police discovered an AK-47 in his vehicle after he was stopped for running a stop-sign.

Mehdiyev said, "I was at the scene to try to murder the journalist." Mehdiyev pleaded guilty to attempted murder, illegal possession of firearms and other charges. He cooperated with the prosecutors.

Alinejad also testified to the jury, saying she saw a man in her yard, surrounded by flowers, in summer 2022. This was the same time Mehdiyev claimed he had staked out the home.

Alinejad said, "The guy seemed a bit suspicious and I panicked." "He was like staring at me from the sunflowers."

When U.S. District Court Judge Colleen M. McMahon sentences Omarov and Amirov on September 17, they could be sentenced to life imprisonment. Reporting by Luc Cohen, Editing by Alistair Bell

(source: Reuters)