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Miami court rejects bail request of Iranian businessman Zarrab

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A US court has denied the bail request put forward by Reza Zarrab, an Iranian businessman at the center of a corruption and bribery scandal that went public on Dec. 17 2013, after he was arrested on charges that he and others engaged in hundreds of millions of dollars of transactions for the Iranian government to evade sanctions against the country.

Zarrab, 33, was arrested in Miami on Saturday on charges contained in a federal indictment in Manhattan against him and two Iranian citizens, Kamelia Jamshidy and Hossein Najafzadeh, US prosecutors said on Monday.

Zarrab, who was accused of being the ringleader of a shady money-laundering and gold-smuggling circle in Turkey that was established to dodge sanctions against Iran, was among 21 people — including the sons of three then-ministers, a district mayor and other high-profile figures — who were arrested as part of the corruption and bribery operation that went public on Dec. 17, 2013 in a series of simultaneous police raids.

The Iranian requested to be released a suspect from jail, pending trial, upon payment of bail. The court rejected this petition. The prosecution asked the Miami Federal Court to freeze all of Zarrab’s assets.

A criminal organization allegedly headed by Zarrab is claimed to have distributed at least TL 137 million ($66 million) in bribes to the former economy and interior ministers, their sons and possibly to some other bureaucrats to cloak fictitious exports and money laundering.

In documents sent by the İstanbul Prosecutor’s Office to Parliament, former ministers Zafer Çağlayan, Muammer Güler and Egemen Bağış are alleged to have accepted bribes. The ministers allegedly flew on Zarrab’s private jet several times. İstanbul prosecutors dropped the charges against the suspects in October of 2014.

“According to charges in the indictment, Zarrab, Jamshidy and Najafzadeh circumvented US sanctions by conducting millions of dollars-worth of transactions on behalf of the Iranian government and Iranian businesses,” said Assistant Attorney General Carlin.  “These alleged violations, as well as the subsequent efforts taken to cover up these illicit actions, undermined US laws designed to protect national security interests.  The National Security Division will continue to vigorously pursue and bring to justice those who seek to violate US sanctions.”

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