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A police officer was seen late Tuesday afternoon going in and out of Pahlavi's Boston apartment and speaking with family representatives, who would not talk to reporters. A neighbor, Dan Phillips, said he did not know Pahlavi personally but recognized his picture and described him as someone who was very sociable and "who always dressed very dapper." "I would always see him walking around here, and he used to wear blue jeans and a blazer," Phillips said. Trita Parsi, the president of the National Iranian American Council, said in a statement that "the Iranian-American community was deeply saddened" by news of the death. "There are many divisions in the community, but on a day like this, I think we are all united in our sympathy with the Pahlavi family for their tragic and painful loss," Parsi said. Reza Pahlavi, who property tax records show lives in Potomac, Md., in Montgomery County, a suburb of Washington, D.C., has spoken out in opposition to Iran's clerical regime. It's not clear how much weight exiled opposition forces have inside Iran nor how many Iranians support the idea of a return to monarchy. Pahlavi said in 2009 that that is not his goal. "I'm not here to advocate anything but ... freedom and democracy for the Iranian people at first, and I've determined this as my unique mission in life," he said at the time. Pahlavi will head to Boston on Wednesday, Eftekhari said, and she expected his mother, who's in Paris, to go as well. Eftekhari said the family asks to be allowed to mourn privately for a few days and no funeral arrangements have been made.
[Associated
Press;
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