New York Daily News

Suspect in assassinat­ion plot is sent to U.S.

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

The leader of an Eastern European organized crime gang accused in the failed murder-for-hire plot of Iranian dissident journalist Masih Alinejad has been extradited to the U.S. to face justice, federal officials said Wednesday.

Polad Omarov’s arrest means all three suspects accused of participat­ing in the July 2022 attempt on Alinejad’s life at her Flatbush, Brooklyn, home are now in federal custody.

Omarov (inset right) was located and arrested in the Czech Republic in January 2023 and extradited Wednesdsay from Prague to the U.S. to await his presentmen­t in Manhattan Federal Court.

The Daily News could not identify his lawyer.

“Polad Omarov is alleged to have brazenly attempted to murder an outspoken critic of Iran’s human rights abuses – right here on American soil,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement. “The audacious alleged plot to kidnap and murder the victim are indicative of Iran’s policies of aggressive suppressio­n and violence against anyone who speaks against them.”

Speaking from Prague, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said the feds had held “Iranian actors accountabl­e for their brazen plot to assassinat­e a U.S. citizen on American soil.”

Alinejad (inset left), a journalist, author and human rights activist who has been a vocal critic of the Iranian regime’s oppression of women, thanked U.S. authoritie­s and said she looks forward to testifying at the trial.

“My adopted country has once again saved me from the murderous regime of my birth country Iran,” Alinejad wrote on X.

Omarov, 39, is accused alongside Rafat Amirov, 45, of directing a New York-based associate to stalk Alinejad round-the-clock in summer 2022 and take her out at the behest of “individual­s in Iran,” according to charging papers.

Prosecutor­s allege Iran-based Amirov enlisted Omarov to help pull off the killing while he was in Europe and that he then recruited Yonkers-based Khalid Mehdiyev, 27, sending him $30,000 to buy a cache of weapons.

Days into his sick job, on July 28, 2022, Mehdiyev was “preparing imminently to execute the attack” when the journalist suspected she wasn’t safe and fled her neighborho­od, according to court papers.

Cops pulled Mehdiyev over about 15 minutes later and discovered an AK-47 assault rifle, 66 rounds of ammunition, $1,100 in cash and a ski mask in his vehicle, court docs charge. He’s been in custody since then, pleading not guilty to related charges last February. Amirov has been held in custody since last year and has pleaded not guilty to related charges.

Alinejad, who fled Iran in 2009, was previously targeted in a failed kidnap plot. Assailants plotted to take her to Venezuela from the East River in a speed boat and lock her up in an Iranian prison, according to the feds.

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