by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Marzieh Hashemi, who works for Press TV's English service, was detained in St. Louis, where she was working on a documentary about the Black Lives Matter movement
Anchor Marzieh Hashemi in the Press TV studio in Tehran, Iran
Photo: Press TV via AP
A prominent American anchorwoman on Iranian
state television has been arrested by the FBI during a visit to the
U.S., the broadcaster reported Wednesday, and her son said she was being
held in a prison, apparently as a material witness.
Marzieh Hashemi, who worked for Press TV's
English-language service, was detained in St. Louis, where she had
filmed a Black Lives Matter documentary after visiting relatives in the
New Orleans area. She was then taken to Washington, according to her
elder son, Hossein Hashemi.
The FBI said in an email that it had no
comment on the arrest of the woman who was born Melanie Franklin in New
Orleans and has worked for Iran's state television network for 25 years.
Hossein Hashemi said his mother lives in
Tehran and comes back to this country about once a year to see her
family, usually scheduling documentary work somewhere in the U.S., as
well.
"We still have no idea what's going on,"
said Hashemi, a research fellow at the University of Colorado who was
interviewed by phone from Washington. He also said he and his siblings
had been subpoenaed to appear before a grand jury.
The incident comes as Iran faces increasing
criticism of its own arrests of dual citizens and other people with
Western ties. Those cases have previously been used as bargaining chips
in negotiations with world powers.
Federal law allows judges to order
witnesses to be arrested and detained if the government can prove their
testimony has extraordinary value for a criminal case and that they
would be a flight risk and unlikely to respond to a subpoena. The
statute generally requires those witnesses to be promptly released once
they are deposed.
Marzieh Hashemi, an American citizen, had
not been contacted by the FBI before she was detained and would
"absolutely" have been willing to cooperate with the agency, her son
said.
Asked whether his mother had been involved
in any criminal activity or knew anyone who might be implicated in a
crime, Hashemi said, "We don't have any information along those lines."
Hashemi said his mother was arrested as she
was about to board a flight from St. Louis to Denver. A spokesman for
St. Louis Lambert International Airport declined to comment and referred
questions to the FBI.
The constitutionality of the material
witness law has "never been meaningfully tested," said Ricardo J.
Bascuas, a professor at the University of Miami School of Law. "The
government only relies on it when they need a reason to arrest somebody
but they don't have one."
No matter the reason for Marzieh Hashemi's detention, she should have been granted a court appearance by now, Bascuas said.
She apparently was unable to call her
daughter until Tuesday night. The family is trying to hire an attorney,
but it has been difficult because she has not been charged with a crime,
her son said.
Paiman Jebeli, deputy chief of Iran's state IRIB broadcaster, gives a press briefing
about Marzieh Hashemi. The hashtag campaign appears on a banner behind him.
AP
Iran's state broadcaster held a news conference and launched a hashtag campaign for Hashemi, using the same techniques families with loved ones held in the Islamic Republic use to highlight their cases.
"We will not spare any legal action" to
help her, said Paiman Jebeli, deputy chief of Iran's state IRIB
broadcaster. Iran's Press TV aired footage of her anchoring news
programs and discussing the war in Syria, set to dramatic music.
There were no references to any case against Hashemi in U.S. federal courts, nor in Missouri.
Hashemi describes herself online as having
studied journalism at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. She
converted to Islam in 1982 at age 22 after meeting Iranian activist
students in Denver.
She married a man she met while in
journalism school. They had two sons and a daughter. Her husband is
dead, said Hashemi's brother, Milton Leroy Franklin of the New Orleans
suburb of Metairie.
At least four other American citizens are
being held in Iran, including Iranian-American Siamak Namazi and his
82-year-old father, Baquer, both serving 10-year sentences on espionage
charges. Iranian-American art dealer Karan Vafadari and his Iranian
wife, Afarin Neyssari, received 27-year and 16-year prison sentences,
respectively. Chinese-American graduate student Xiyue Wang was sentenced
to 10 years in prison.
Also in an Iranian prison is Nizar Zakka, a
permanent U.S. resident from Lebanon who advocated for internet freedom
and has done work for the U.S. government. He was sentenced to 10 years
on espionage-related charges.
Former FBI agent Robert Levinson, who
vanished in Iran in 2007 while on an unauthorized CIA mission, remains
missing as well. Iran says that Levinson is not in the country and that
it has no further information about him. His family holds Tehran
responsible for his disappearance.
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2019/01/17/american-anchor-for-iranian-tv-arrested-on-visit-to-us/
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