Arab News

Iran sanctions trial judge slams ‘foreign conspiracy theory’

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NEW YORK: A judge on Friday belittled a Turkey official’s claims that a Turkish cleric living in Pennsylvan­ia is behind a banker’s trial in an Iran economic sanctions conspiracy, labeling it an “illogical foreign conspiracy theory.”

US District Judge Richard M. Berman commented as he rejected a defense mistrial request after a former Turkish police official testified he fled Turkey because he had discovered government corruption, resulting in his own arrest, and feared for his safety.

Defense lawyers for Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla said in court papers that testimony earlier this week by Huseyin Korkmaz was prejudicia­l and “guaranteed to inflame the jury against the defendant.”

The judge accused a defense lawyer of joining “a rather far-fetched conspiracy theory bandwagon” by questionin­g Korkmaz, a former deputy police inspector in Istanbul, about cleric Fethullah Gulen, a green-card holder living in selfimpose­d exile in Pennsylvan­ia.

Mahir Unal, a deputy chairman of Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling party, recently described the New York trial as a “political” one lacking legal basis. Unal renewed a Turkish government claim that US judicial officials were cooperatin­g with Gulen’s network against Turkey.

Erdogan has accused Gulen of being behind a botched coup and has sought his extraditio­n. Gulen has denied the allegation­s, and US officials have rebuffed Turkey’s extraditio­n demands, citing a lack of evidence.

When Korkmaz was questioned by a prosecutor as to whether he was released from a Turkish prison after Gulen sent the judge a letter, Korkmaz responded: “This sounds very illogical to me. I don’t know Fethullah Gulen.”

Asked if he was ever a member of the Gulen organizati­on, he responded: “No, never.”

The judge said the defense, which first raised the subject of Gulen, was attempting to introduce an “illogical foreign conspiracy theory” with no foundation in the record as a diversion from issues in the case. He called the tactic “unpersuasi­ve and borderline unprofessi­onal.”

The developmen­t came after Atilla began testifying on Friday in his defense, denying claims by prosecutor­s that he was the brains behind a scheme that began in 2011 as he and others at his employer, the state-run Halkbank, helped to launder billions of dollars in Iranian oil revenue.

Prosecutor­s say the FBI began investigat­ing after the US Department of the Treasury realized in 2013 that Atilla, wealthy gold trader Reza Zarrab and others were conspiring to use front companies, forged documents and fake transactio­ns involving gold or humanitari­an shipments of food to get around US economic sanctions imposed on Iran.

Korkmaz testified that his investigat­ion turned up evidence against three government ministers and Erdogan, who was then prime minister, but he did not have authority to build a case against them. After arrests were made in December 2013, the investigat­ion was shut down and Erdogan dismissed police and prosecutor­s conducting the probe. Korkmaz was transferre­d and later arrested and imprisoned for a year-and-a-half.

 ??  ?? Mehmet Hakan Atilla, a deputy general manager of Halkbank, is shown in this court room sketch as he appears in Manhattan federal court in New York, New York, US, in this file photo. (Reuters)
Mehmet Hakan Atilla, a deputy general manager of Halkbank, is shown in this court room sketch as he appears in Manhattan federal court in New York, New York, US, in this file photo. (Reuters)

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