TEHRAN (AP) — Two Americans accused of spying appeared in a closed-door Iranian court session Sunday to begin trial after an 18-month detention that has brought impassioned family appeals, a stunning bail deal to free their companion and backdoor diplomatic outreach by Washington through an Arab ally in the Gulf.
All three — two in person and one in absentia — entered not guilty pleas during the five-hour hearing, said their lawyer, Masoud Shafiei.
He added that he was barred by Iranian law from giving any further details of the proceedings. But he noted that the judge decided for at least one more session in Tehran Revolutionary Court, which deals with state security cases, including some of the high-profile opposition figures arrested in the violent aftermath of Iran’s disputed election in 2009.
He described the jailed Americans — Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal — as appearing in good health and said they sat next to him during the trial session.
“I hoped the case would have ended today,” Mr. Shafiei told the Associated Press. “I now hope they fix the next session for the near future.”
The case highlights the power of Iran’s judiciary, which is controlled directly by the nation’s ruling clerics and has rejected apparent appeals by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to show some leniency.
But Mr. Ahmadinejad also has tried to draw attention to Iranians in U.S. jails, raising the possibility the detainees have been viewed as potential bargaining chips with Washington at a time of high-stakes showdowns over Iran’s nuclear program.
Court authorities imposed a blanket ban on observers, including Swiss Ambassador Livia Leu Agosti, who represents U.S. interests in Iran in the absence of direct diplomatic relations.
The third American, Mr. Bauer’s fiancee, Sarah Shourd, was released in September on $500,000 bail arranged through the Gulf nation of Oman, which maintains close ties to both the West and Iran. She was ordered back to Tehran for the trial by Iranian officials, and the bail likely will be forfeited because of her absence.
The Americans were detained in July 2009 along the Iraqi border. They claim that they were hiking in Iraq’s Kurdistan region and that if they crossed into Iran, it was inadvertent.
Iran, however, pressed forward with spy charges that could bring a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison if convicted.
Miss Shourd and Mr. Bauer had been living together in Damascus, Syria, where Mr. Bauer was working as a freelance journalist and Miss Shourd as an English teacher. Mr. Fattal, an environmental activist, went to visit them in July 2009, shortly before their trip to northern Iraq.
The families of the detainees have made high-profile appeals for their release, including during a visit by the three mothers to Tehran in May. The trip, however, was carefully orchestrated by Iranian authorities and included a meeting between the mothers and relatives of five Iranians held for more than two years by the U.S. military in Iraq.
Just days after her release, Miss Shourd met Mr. Ahmadinejad while he was in New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly and asked for his intervention to free Mr. Bauer and Mr. Fattal.
In an interview with the Associated Press at the time, Mr. Ahmadinejad noted that while the Americans had broken the law by crossing into Iran, he would ask the judiciary to expedite the process and to “look at the case with maximum leniency.”
Yet Mr. Ahmadinejad also has used the case to draw attention to Iranians held in the United States.
In particular, he drew a link to the trial in the United States of Amir Hossein Ardebili, an Iranian who was sentenced to five years in prison last year after pleading guilty to plotting to ship sensitive U.S. military technology to Iran.
According to court papers, Mr. Ardebili worked as a procurement agent for the Iranian government and acquired thousands of components, including military aircraft parts, night vision devices, communications equipment and Kevlar body armor. U.S. authorities targeted him in 2004 after he contacted an undercover storefront set up in Philadelphia to investigate illegal arms trafficking.
The current case in Tehran recalls that of American-Iranian journalist Roxanna Saberi, who was arrested in Iran in January 2009 and convicted of espionage and sentenced to eight years in prison. She was freed on appeal in May 2009.
A political analyst at the independent Mardomsalari newspaper in Tehran, Hamid Reza Shokouhi, said the secretive nature of the court proceedings is “not necessarily a negative point” for the jailed Americans. He said that past experiences, such as Ms. Saberi’s case, showed that the judiciary eventually can show a “positive attitude.”
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