Saturday, December 20, 2008

Florida: Iranian woman convicted of trying to get thousands of night-vision goggles for Iran's military

Don't be so hasty! Maybe she just really, really had trouble seeing while driving at night, and wanted a few backup pairs!

"Woman convicted over night vision goggles," from AP, December 18 (thanks to all who sent this in):
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -- A federal jury on Thursday convicted an Iranian woman of attempting to obtain thousands of pairs sophisticated U.S.-made night-vision goggles for Iran's military and police.
Jurors found Shahrazad Mir Gholikhan, 31, guilty of trying to illegally broker the deal to export the goggles, which are subject to strict controls, and of seeking to violate the U.S. embargo against Iran. But the jury acquitted her of three conspiracy counts.

Gholikhan, who acted as her own attorney during the trial, said she would appeal and insisted the she is innocent.

"I won't give up. It's OK. God is here," Gholikhan said in a brief courtroom interview. She appeared relieved that the trial was over....

The case involved the attempted purchase of 3,500 Generation III night-vision goggles for Iran. The goggles are made mainly for U.S. special forces and the Israeli military and cannot be legally exported without a special State Department license.

Gholikhan and her husband, Mahmoud Seif, were arrested 2004 in Vienna, Austria, in 2004 after a hotel meeting with undercover U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents posing as brokers for the goggles. Gholikhan spent a month in an Austrian jail and was released. Seif was also detained but eventually returned to Iran, where he remains.

With the U.S. case hanging over her head, Gholikhan came to the U.S. in December 2007 and pleaded guilty to a single conspiracy count in a deal in which she expected to be allowed to return home. But her plea deal fell apart because of an error in the estimated sentence that left her looking at more than two years in prison.

Gholikhan, the mother of twin 12-year-old daughters still in Iran, then withdrew her guilty plea and decided to go to trial

"I am sure of myself. I am innocent," Gholikhan said in her closing statement Wednesday.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Walleisa said Gholikhan used the alias "Farideh Fahimi" in dozens of taped phone calls and e-mail intercepts that discuss the goggles in detail.

Gholikhan insisted she was under Seif's control and that Fahimi was a Syrian woman who also worked for him. She said Seif "used and abused" her and that he was the boss of the goggle conspiracy. But prosecutors said her story wasn't true.

"She knew what she was doing," Walleisa said. "She was a knowing and willing participant in these acts."


Copyright 2008 The E.W. Scripps Co. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


.

No comments: