Call & Times

Family: US believes ex-FBI agent Robert Levinson has died

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. government has concluded that retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who vanished more than a decade ago, has died while in the custody of Iran, his family said Wednesday.

Shortly after the family’s announceme­nt, President Donald Trump told reporters that “I won’t accept that he’s dead,” even though his own acting national intelligen­ce director appeared to confirm the news with a statement conveying sympathies for the Levinsons. The family said in a statement posted on Twitter that it had no informatio­n about how or when Levinson had died, but that it occurred before the recent coronaviru­s outbreak. The family said informatio­n that U.S. officials had received led them to conclude that he is dead.

U.S. officials communicat­ed the news to Levinson’s family in a meeting in Washington in recent weeks, according to a person familiar with the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private encounter. The person said the informatio­n about Levinson had come from Iran’s foreign minister.

“It is impossible to describe our pain,” the family’s statement said. “Our family will spend the rest of our lives without the most amazing man, a new reality that is inconceiva­ble to us. His grandchild­ren will never meet him. They will know him only through the stories we tell them.’

Levinson disappeare­d on March 9, 2007, when he was scheduled to meet a source on the Iranian island of Kish. For years, U.S. officials would say only that Levinson was working independen­tly on a private investigat­ion.

But a 2013 Associated Press investigat­ion revealed that Levinson had been sent on a mission by CIA analysts who had no authority to run such an operation.

The Trump administra­tion has made it a priority to seek the release of American hostages and prisoners detained overseas. Last week, administra­tion officials touted the release from Lebanon of a New Hampshire restaurant owner jailed on decades-old allegation­s and the medical furlough of a Navy veteran from an Iranian prison.

The Levinson family thanked multiple U.S. officials for their help, including FBI Director Chris Wray, CIA Director Gina Haspel and Robert O’Brien, the Trump administra­tion’s national security adviser.

But it also said: “Those who are responsibl­e for what happened to Bob Levinson, including those in the U.S. government who for many years repeatedly left him behind, will ultimately receive justice for what they have done. We will spend the rest of our lives making sure of this, and the Iranian regime must know we will not be going away.”

The family said it does not know when or if Levinson’s body will be returned for burial.

At a White House briefing on the coronaviru­s, Trump appeared to equivocate on the accuracy of the family’s statement, saying that Iranian officials had not told the U.S. that Levinson was dead and that “I won’t accept that he’s dead.”

But he also acknowledg­ed that “it’s not looking promising” and said Levinson, who had diabetes and high blood pressure at the time of his disappeara­nce, had had “some rough problems.”

“He was a great gentleman,” he said.

Iran repeatedly has said it has no informatio­n about Levinson, though U.S. diplomats and investigat­ors have long said they thought he was taken by Iranian government agents.

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