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Zarrab Acts As Witness During Atilla Trial, Cooperates with US Prosecutors

 In a courtroom sketch Judge Richard Berman (second from right) and US Attorney Sidhardha Kamarju (far right) listen as Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab, second from left, with an unidentified interpreter (far left) describe a scheme using a diagram he drew, outlining how he helped Iran to evade US economic sanctions, Wednesday November 29, 2017. ( AP ) In a courtroom sketch Judge Richard Berman (second from right) and US Attorney Sidhardha Kamarju (far right) listen as Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab, second from left, with an unidentified interpreter (far left) describe a scheme using a diagram he drew, outlining how he helped Iran to evade US economic sanctions, Wednesday November 29, 2017. ( AP )

Turkish gold trader Reza Zarrab on Wednesday accepted all charges that he was accused of and agreed to cooperate with US prosecutors against Mehmet Hakan Atilla, the deputy general manager of Turkey's Halkbank. The businessman was detained last year on charges of violating sanctions against Iran while Atilla was arrested in the US earlier this year on similar charges of sanctions violations. US prosecutors have charged nine people in the case, although only Zarrab and Atilla have been arrested by US authorities. The hearing began on Tuesday after US District Judge Richard Berman rejected a request by Atilla’s lawyers for a two-week delay.



On the second day of the hearing, the court continued to listen to the witnesses, including Zarrab, who said he did not "tell the truth completely and transparently" to the FBI as he "did not know" what he would come across and "felt scared" when he was detained in Miami last year.

TRT World’s correspondent Ediz Tiyansan has more from New York.

Zarrab accepted all charges he is accused of and said in federal court that he helped Iran use funds deposited in Turkey's Halkbank to buy gold, which was transferred to Dubai and sold for cash. He also agreed to cooperate with the US prosecutors because he said it was "the best way to be released from jail."

Zarrab in the court drew a multicoloured diagram to illustrate the complex series of transactions he said he used to avoid scrutiny of US banks and regulators. He explained how he falsified customs documents to make it appear that gold was bound for Iran, rather than Dubai.

Other people on the witness list including alleged members of Fetullah Terrorist Organisation (FETO), Osman Zeki Canitez and Aykan Erdemir, appeared in the court. Erdemir is also a former deputy of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP).

The Istanbul chief prosecutor's office on Tuesday issued arrest warrants for the two, and charged them with "stealing documents related to national security".

US attorney defends his evidence

At Tuesday's hearing, the prosecutor’s office directed all charges Zarrab is accused of to Atilla.

The office defended voice recordings it had submitted to the court as evidence and did not disclose their source.

David Denton, the deputy prosecuting attorney, said the people who made the recordings did their job. He also said they would testify as witnesses.

Victor Rocco, Atilla’s lawyer, rejected the charges his client is accused of, saying “Atilla was one of the victims of Zarrab.”

He further mentioned that Atilla had travelled to the US twice after Zarrab was detained, Rocco also criticised the voice recordings on the grounds that they were obtained illegally.

Lack of "legal ground"

Turkey recently launched a probe against US prosecutors connected to the Zarrab case.

Istanbul prosecutors accused former US attorney for the southern district of New York, Preet Bharara, and his replacement Joon H. Kim of using information and documents from an old Turkish investigation in their case.

Bharara, who launched the probe into Zarrab, was fired on March 11 as part of a mass Trump administration housecleaning of US attorneys who served under President Barack Obama.

Turkish authorities have called on the US administration to drop the case involving Zarrab saying it "lacks legal grounds." Turkey says that it is not subject to US-based sanctıons as they are not upheld or recognised by the UN.
Source: AA

Last modified onWednesday, 13 December 2017 08:55
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