Los Angeles Times

Life sentence in abduction, mutilation

Hossein Nayeri was convicted last year of ‘ sick act’ against pot dispensary owner.

- By Christophe­r Goffard

Hossein Nayeri, the 41year- old Newport Beach man who was convicted last year of playing a role in the kidnapping and mutilation of a medical marijuana dealer, was sentenced Friday to life in prison without parole for what a prosecutor described as “diabolical” behavior.

Prosecutor­s said the 2012 crime stemmed from Nayeri’s mistaken belief that the owner of a prosperous Santa Ana pot dispensary, who has been referred to in court as John Doe, had hidden $ 1 million in the Mojave Desert.

Nayeri and two other attackers abducted the man and a female housemate from a home on 25th Street in Newport Beach and forced them into a van. The attackers tortured the dispensary owner, tasing him, burning him with bleach, severing his penis and leaving him in the desert. He was rescued after his housemate made it back to the road and hailed a passing sheriff ’ s deputy.

“From a psychology standpoint I live with the feeling of always looking over my shoulder, never feeling 100% safe in any one location for any period of time,” the dispensary owner told Judge Gregg Prickett at Friday’s sentencing hearing in Orange County Superior Court.

The man detailed the injuries he had suffered, from chemical and Taser burns to the genital mutilation he called “the most gratuitous, sadistic injury.”

“What kind of human being does such a thing?” he said. “The complicati­ons and pain both physically and psychologi­cally which are connected to this sick act are so profound and deep that words cannot begin to discuss the depths of my pain.”

Asking the judge to impose a life sentence on Nayeri, prosecutor Heather Brown said the crime was motivated by “pure and utter greed.”

“Mr. Nayeri wanted something that he believed the victim in this case had, and he was willing to do anything to get that, including torture and tase and whip and burn the victim in this case, so that he could try to get some mysterious money that he believed that he had,” Brown said. “In the People’s mind there’s no punishment that’s great enough for Mr. Nayeri. He is incredibly dangerous. The acts he committed were diabolical.”

Prosecutor­s said Nayeri had been the ringleader of the abduction plot. Nayeri had been combative and volatile on the witness stand at his trial last year, and at his sentencing he spoke brief ly, his voice stentorian and indignant.

Addressing the victims and their families, he said he was “truly sorry for what you all have been through” but otherwise offered no expression­s of remorse. Instead, he used his platform to rage against the justice system and to brag of his personal growth.

“We all have f laws and we know it. I have many f laws. Wanting to hurt someone is not one of them,” Nayeri said. “I keep evolving. Moving and improving. Otherwise, as one of my heroes, Bob Dylan, says, ‘ If you’re not busy being born, you’re busy dying.’ ”

Nayeri also denounced his trial, saying that “people were presented with incomplete facts and distorted reality” and adding: “John Wayne would have been dazzled by this wild wild West style of justice in Orange County.”

During the monthlong trial in the summer of 2019, Nayeri admitted to having surveilled the dispensary owner but denied participat­ing in the abduction.

Nayeri’s DNA turned up on a glove inside a truck spotted at the abduction site. Jurors convicted him of two counts of kidnapping and one count of torture, though they concluded that he had not performed the mutilation personally.

At the trial, Nayeri’s former wife, Cortney Shegerian, testified that she helped Nayeri perform surveillan­ce on the dispensary owner.

When Nayeri f led to Iran amid the police investigat­ion, Shegerian cooperated with authoritie­s to lure him to the Czech Republic, for ultimate extraditio­n to the United States.

On Friday, Prickett denied Nayeri’s request for a new trial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States