Los Angeles Times

Verdict in reporter’s case in Iran

Tehran does not say what the ruling is. American Jason Rezaian has been in custody for 14 months.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell and Ramin Mostaghim patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Twitter: @mcdneville Mostaghim is a special correspond­ent.

TEHRAN — An Iranian court has reached a verdict in the case of a Washington Post correspond­ent jailed on espionage and other charges, the judiciary said Sunday without specifying what the ruling was.

Neither the defense nor the journalist’s family was notified of the verdict’s content.

“I have no idea what they decided,” Leila Ahsan, attorney for reporter Jason Rezaian, said in a telephone interview in Tehran, the Iranian capital. “Neither I or Jason’s mother has received any verdict.”

Judiciary branch spokesman Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehi said at a weekly news briefing earlier Sunday that the court had ruled in the controvers­ial case of Rezaian, who has been jailed for more than a year. But he said he did not know the verdict.

The verdict can be appealed within 20 days after it has been received, the judiciary spokesman said.

In a statement, Martin Baron, executive editor of the Washington Post, called the latest developmen­t “vague and puzzling,” and said word of an unspecifie­d ruling continued a pattern of “injustice” in the case.

“Jason is a victim — arrested without cause, held for months in isolation, without access to a lawyer, subjected to physical mistreatme­nt and psychologi­cal abuse, and now convicted without basis,” Baron said. “The only thing that has ever been clear about this case is Jason’s innocence.”

The case has drawn condemnati­on from advocates of media freedom and has been an irritant in relations between the U.S. and Iran, longtime adversarie­s without formal diplomatic ties since 1980. Rezaian’s family has mounted a vigorous internatio­nal campaign for the journalist’s release.

Rezaian engaged solely in legitimate and legal journalist­ic activities while acting as Tehran bureau chief for the Post since 2012, according to his employer, his family and his lawyer.

The journalist’s brother, Ali, said in a statement that news of a court decision “is unfortunat­ely just another sad chapter in his 14-month illegal imprisonme­nt and opaque trial process.”

Ali Rezaian added: “The Iranian government has never provided any proof of the trumped-up espionage and other charges against Jason, so today’s vague statement on a purported verdict, while certainly disappoint­ing to our family, is not surprising.”

Jason Rezaian, 39, was tried for espionage and related national security charges in a closed-door proceeding this year in Iran’s Revolution­ary Court, which often handles sensitive cases.

He was arrested July 22, 2014, along with three other journalist­s, including his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, who works for the National newspaper, based in United Arab Emirates. Rezaian is the only one of the four who remains in custody. If convicted on espionage charges, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

Rezaian is a native of the San Francisco Bay Area and a U.S.-Iranian national. Iran does not recognize dual nationalit­y of its citizens.

 ?? Associated Press ?? JASON REZAIAN, the Washington Post’s Tehran bureau chief, is shown in 2013.
Associated Press JASON REZAIAN, the Washington Post’s Tehran bureau chief, is shown in 2013.

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