Complaint attached

Iranian is held as people-smuggler 
By Michael Marizco ARIZONA DAILY STAR Published: 06.01.2005
<http://www.dailystar.com/dailystar/news/77771.php> 

An Iranian man is accused of trying to smuggle three of his countrymen into
Arizona through Nogales, Sonora, federal prosecutors said Tuesday. 

Zeayadale Malhamdary, 39, a Mesa tailor, was arrested Thursday after a
nine-month undercover operation by the Southern Arizona Joint Terrorism Task
Force. He is being held on attempted-migrant- smuggling charges, said Sandy
Raynor, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office. 

The FBI, which heads the terror task force, has no reason to believe this is
any more than a smuggling case, said Deborah McCarley, spokeswoman for the
bureau's Phoenix office. 

According to the affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in Phoenix: 

Last September, Malhamdary told an FBI informant posing as a migrant
smuggler that he had already sneaked in a group of 20 Iranians through
Sonoita, Ariz. Wiretaps recorded Malhamdary asking the informant to help him
obtain Mexican visas to be placed into Iranian passports so more Iranians
could fly into Mexico City then slip through Arizona with a smuggler's help.


In a later phone call, he asked for a supply of Mexican visas because he
already had one group turned away from a flight into Mexico after they were
discovered with improper visas. 

In March, Malhamdary flew back to Tehran, Iran, telling the FBI source he
needed to gather the passports of three Iranians. He returned three weeks
later with the passports and handed them over to the informant. The
informant noticed several other passports in Malhamdary's possession that
were not handed over. 

At the same meeting, Malhamdary told the informant he previously had 60 more
Iranians smuggled into the United States. 

Two weeks ago, Malhamdary called the informant and told him that as soon as
the three visas were created for the passports, he would bring $12,000 and
eight more passports to be doctored, the affidavit stated. 

On May 26, Malhamdary was arrested at his Mesa home. He told the agents he
was trying to bring the Iranians into the United States so they could seek
refugee status. Earlier, he told the FBI informant he'd successfully had his
sister smuggled into the country. 

Federal officials are treating the case as an attempted-smuggling
investigation, McCarley said. 

"Right now there's no information to suggest any of the individuals he was
bringing in had any kind of terror plots," she said. "However, the border is
one of our vulnerabilities. Anyone coming over the border illegally and
using false identifications to do so - we don't know always what their
intentions are." 

In Arizona, very few of the illegal entrants the Border Patrol captures are
from countries beyond the Western Hemisphere. The agency doesn't give a
breakdown of people from countries not in this hemisphere because it uses
that data to track what other countries people try to come in from, said
Tucson Sector spokeswoman Andrea Zortman. 

This year, 172 people have been captured since Oct. 1 who were not from
Central or South America, she said. In all of the fiscal year prior, 484
others were apprehended in the Tucson Sector. 

In a report released by Colorado Republican Rep. Tom Tancredo last year, 132
people from countries including Iran, Pakistan and Egypt were arrested at
the U.S.-Mexican border. 

In March, FBI Director Robert Mueller reported to Congress that people from
countries with ties to al-Qaida had already crossed into the United States
from Mexico, using Brazil as a conduit. 

But the U.S. government has yet to prosecute anybody on terrorism charges
stemming from an illegal entry through the U.S.-Mexican border. 

”EContact reporter Michael Marizco at 573-4213 or at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 



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