Man who sent details on U.S. military
jets to Iran to be sentenced
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[October 23, 2015]
By Richard Weizel
HARTFORD, Conn. (Reuters) - A dual
U.S.-Iranian citizen who pleaded guilty to trying to export sensitive
information about U.S. military jets to his native Iran could be
sentenced to up to 10 years in federal prison at a hearing on Friday.
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Mozaffar Khazaee, who had worked as an engineer at U.S. defense
contractor Pratt & Whitney, was arrested in January 2014 as he tried
to leave the country with sensitive material about the engines for
the U.S. Air Force's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and F-22 Raptor
aircraft in his luggage.
Khazaee also had exchanged e-mails containing information about the
programs with Iranian contacts.
While he pleaded guilty to the charges, Khazaee maintained in court
papers that he sent information on the jets as part of a
presentation he had prepared while seeking a job with an Iranian
university after being laid off by his prior employer, a unit of
diversified manufacturer United Technologies Corp., in 2013.
The U.S. Arms Export Control Act limits the export of information
related to weapons systems.
Federal prosecutors contended that Khazaee's description of that
exchange was inaccurate, saying he had e-mailed information on the
jets well before being laid off and that he had told a contact in
Iran in an e-mail the information he sent was "very controlled ... I
am taking [a] big risk."
At a hearing in U.S. District Court in Hartford on Friday,
prosecutors plan to ask for a sentence exceeding the 71 months laid
out in federal sentencing guidelines, according to court papers.
Khazaee's lawyers in a court filing asked the judge in the case to
let the defendant, who is in his mid-60s, off on time served.
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"His conduct was less serious than other crimes contemplated by this
guideline, and did not threaten or harm the security or foreign
policy interest of the United States," his attorneys wrote.
His 85-year-old mother, who spells her name Molok Khazaye, in a
letter to the court asked for leniency for her son.
"I have no protector other than (my son) and am depend on him
financially and emotionally strongly so," the defendant's mother
wrote. "I kindly request you to grant him a pardon due to his
mistake."
Khazaee's brother and sister also asked for his release.
Prior to Pratt & Whitney, which makes jet engines, Khazaee worked at
major manufacturers including General Electric Co., according to
court papers.
(Writing by Scott Malone)
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