Chicago Sun-Times

Feds: Iranian spies targeted political foes, Jewish group in Hyde Park

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

An Iranian-American man was arrested in Chicago earlier this month and charged with spying on Israeli and Jewish facilities in the area and collecting informatio­n on Americans associated with a political group that advocates for the overthrow of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s regime.

A federal complaint that was unsealed Monday charged 38-year-old Ahmadreza Mohammadi-Doostdar with conspiracy, acting as an unregister­ed foreign agent and providing services to Iran that violate U.S. sanctions. Majid Ghorbani, a 59-year-old Iranian citizen who lives in California, was also charged.

Both men were arrested on Aug. 9, according to a statement from the Department of Justice. Doostdar was arrested in Chicago, while Ghorbani was taken into custody in Los Angeles, California, according to ABC7 News.

“The National Security Division is committed to protecting the United States from individual­s within our country who unlawfully act on behalf of hostile foreign nations,” Assistant U.S. Attorney General John Demers said in a statement. “Doostdar and Ghorbani are alleged to have acted on behalf of Iran, including by conducting surveillan­ce of political opponents and engaging in other activities that could put Americans at risk. With their arrest and these charges, we are seeking to hold the defendants accountabl­e.”

According to the criminal complaint, Doostdar traveled to Chicago last July and conducted surveillan­ce at Rohr Chabad, a Jewish student center at the University of Chicago in Hyde Park, where he allegedly took photograph­s of security features surroundin­g the facility.

That same day, Doostdar also visited the Oriental Institute Museum at the University of Chicago, where he “moved through the museum in an unusual fashion” and met with an unidentifi­ed female, according to the complaint.

Last September, Ghorbani allegedly conducted surveillan­ce at a rally in New York City led by Mojahedin-e Khalq, of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran, a political-militant organizati­on that advocates for the overthrow of the current regime in Iran, the complaint said.

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