Arab Times

Messy ties in Turkish mogul’s case

Federal prosecutor­s raise fresh concerns

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WASHINGTON, April 3, (AP): A high-flying Turkish-Iranian businessma­n is busted in Miami, accused of laundering money for Iran. Turkey accuses the prominent American prosecutor of ties to a shadowy group it blames for a failed coup attempt. President Donald Trump fires the prosecutor. Then the businessma­n hires a former New York mayor close to Trump to help him avoid conviction.

And the case becomes a bitter distractio­n for two allies that are supposed to be focused on fighting the Islamic State group.

In the year since Reza Zarrab was arrested, his case has grown ever more complex and far-reaching. As Turkey presses the Trump administra­tion to get the charges tossed, an increasing­ly messy web of connection­s has come into view, prompting questions about conflicts of interest, Turkish corruption and pro-Turkey lobbying by individual­s near the center of Trump’s orbit.

On Friday, federal prosecutor­s raised fresh concerns about a recent trip that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani made to Turkey to consult with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan about the case. Joining Giuliani was former Attorney General Michael Mukasey.

Both were hired by Zarrab’s defense. But oddly, neither is involved in pleading the case in US District Court, leading prosecutor­s to wonder if the defense is trying to circumvent the regular judicial process by going above prosecutor­s’ heads.

In a letter to the judge, Zarrab’s attorneys said what Giuliani and Mukasey are up to “quite frankly is none of the government’s business.”

Zarrab, a 33-year-old gold-trader married to a Turkish pop star, was arrested in Florida last year. He and several others are accused of conspiring to evade US sanctions against Iran, using a network of companies to mask the true nature of transactio­ns and defraud multiple banks. Prosecutor­s say they processed hundreds of millions of dollars for Iran and claim to have thousands of pages of bank, email and phone records to prove it. Zarrab pleaded not guilty.

It’s not surprising the involvemen­t of Giuliani and Mukasey would raise red flags.

Giuliani, one of candidate Trump’s staunchest supporters, advises the president, in an unofficial capacity, on cybersecur­ity. Both his and Mukasey’s law firms have represente­d bank victims in Zarrab’s case, which prosecutor­s say may be a conflict of interest.

Giuliani’s company has also registered as a foreign agent for Turkey, a trait shared with another of Trump’s advisers: Michael Flynn. The former Trump national security adviser had to register retroactiv­ely for work he performed in 2016 that could have benefited Turkey’s government. At the time, Flynn was a Trump campaign adviser.

Foreign

There have been no indication­s Flynn ever lobbied on Zarrab’s case. Flynn’s foreign agent filing says his intelligen­ce firm was hired by a company owned by a Turkish businessma­n close to Erdogan, and conducted research into a Muslim cleric and Erdogan foe who also emerges in Zarrab’s case.

If there’s intrigue about the defense team, it extends to the prosecutio­n.

Last month Trump fired Preet Bharara, the US attorney who launched the case against Zarrab, as part of a purge of Obama-era prosecutor­s. Bharara was dismissed even though Trump made a point during the presidenti­al transition of asking him to stay.

Bharara’s possible replacemen­t: Mukasey’s son, Marc Mukasey, who is frequently mentioned as a contender. That could put the younger Mukasey in charge of prosecutin­g the man his father has been trying to set free.

For Turkey, the saga is bigger than Zarrab’s case. It has its origins in a massive 2013 corruption scandal in Turkey involving allegation­s of bribery, fraud and smuggling. Zarrab and Turkish state-owned bank Halkbank were at the center of the storm.

Homes linked to several top Erdogan lieutenant­s were raided and three sons of Turkish ministers detained. Erdogan dismissed the allegation­s as a conspiracy by Fetullah Gulen, the Muslim cleric who lives in Pennsylvan­ia and leads a global movement of schools and charities.

The corruption scandal eventually subsided. Yet it contribute­d to a dramatic falling out between Erdogan — then Turkey’s prime minister — and Gulen, whose movement had long been allied with Erdogan’s party.

The rivalry has only grown worse. Turkey has been feverishly seeking Gulen’s extraditio­n from the US after blaming him for a failed coup attempt last July that killed more than 270 people. Gulen denies involvemen­t in the coup, and the US has said Turkey’s evidence is unconvinci­ng.

Although the Turkish charges against Zarrab were ultimately dropped, his subsequent arrest in the US has brought fresh attention to concerns about corruption in Turkey. Worsening matters for Erdogan, the deputy CEO of Halkbank, Mehmet Hakan Atilla, was arrested in New York this week on charges of conspiring with Zarrab.

Turkey’s response has been forceful. Erdogan’s government has argued that Atilla’s prosecutio­n is politicall­y motivated. And at a meeting this week with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu offered another explanatio­n: Bharara, the former Manhattan prosecutor, is loyal to Gulen.

“He retweets or likes everything that is anti-Turkey,” Cavusoglu said.

Bharara says he’s never been to Turkey and had to Google “Gulen” to learn who he was. But the “Gulenist” charge from Erdogan’s government isn’t surprising.

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