Brooklyn

Iranian Dissident: Man With Rifle Arrested Outside Brooklyn Home Is Agent for Iran

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Masih Alinejad, an Iranian opposition activist and writer in exile in New York City, said that the man who was arrested after he was found to have a gun while outside her Brooklyn home was "an Iranian agent."

In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Alinejad said that the FBI affidavit identified the man arrested on July 28 as Khalid Mehdiyev. In addition to cash, the weapon and ammunition, Alinejad wrote that that police also found multiple false license plates from numerous states in the suspect's car.

"Regime officials are humiliated that this latest foiled plot makes the regime look like a bumbling failure," she wrote.

A Yonkers man is in federal custody arrested on a weapons charge after traveling with a loaded AK-47 near the NYC home of Iranian dissident Masih Alinejad.

People familiar with the investigation said there is evidence now that Iranian officials played a role in the alleged targeting of Alinejad.

Federal prosecutors in New York charged a man in late July with driving around Alinejad's Brooklyn neighborhood with a loaded assault rifle and dozens of rounds of ammunition. Alinejad previously said Monday that authorities told her the man was looking for her, and that a home security video had caught him skulking outside her front door.

“It is shocking that someone came to my house with a loaded assault rifle,” Alinejad told The Associated Press in an email. “Last year, the FBI foiled a kidnap plot. Now a killer is dispatched to deal with me.”

The suspect, Mehdiyev, has been locked up without bail and his lawyer declined comment. The U.S. Attorney’s office also wouldn’t talk about the case beyond what for now is a gun possession charge.

Alinejad had already been identified as the target of an alleged kidnapping plot. In 2021, U.S. prosecutors charged an Iranian intelligence officer and others with plotting to kidnap Alinejad and take her back to Tehran. Iranian officials called accusations “baseless and ridiculous.”

Alinejad, who worked for years as a journalist in Iran and became a U.S. citizen in 2019, has long been targeted by its theocracy after fleeing the country following its disputed 2009 presidential election and crackdown. She’s known as a prominent figure on Farsi-language satellite channels abroad that criticize Iran.

In the new case, a criminal complaint filed against Mehdiyev doesn’t directly tie him to Iran or the kidnapping plot. Instead, it only charges him with a gun violation based on a traffic stop by the New York Police Department, but also cites what they say were his contradictory statements about his conduct that implicate him in a more serious way.

The complaint says Mehdiyev was seen lurking near Alinejad’s home last week and, after ordering food delivery to his vehicle, approached the residence and looked in through the windows and tried to open the front door. A short time later, police officers pulled him over and arrested him for driving with a suspended license.

A later search of the car found a suitcase containing a rifle “loaded with a round in the chamber and a magazine attached, along with a separate second magazine, and a total of approximately 66 rounds of ammunition,” the papers say, adding, ”The serial number of the rifle appears to have been obliterated.”

Initially, Mehdiyev claimed he was in the neighborhood looking for a room to rent, the papers say, and that he had borrowed the car he was driving and didn’t know about the gun. He later admitted the gun was his and that he had been in the area “looking for someone,” they add.

At that point, he stopped talking and asked for a lawyer.

In her email, Alinejad said her situation shows the need for the U.S. government to take a tougher stance toward Iran.

“What happened this weekend is NOT normal and does not just affect just me,” she wrote. “This poses a risk to EVERYONE. This is not behavior that anyone in the United States should be accepting as normal.”

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