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Alleged Middleman in Smuggling of Arms to Iran Is Extradited

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Times Staff Writer

More than three years after he was indicted, an Iranian, believed to be the European middleman for a San Diego-based ring that smuggled military parts to Iran, has been extradited and is in the Metropolitan Correction Center awaiting trial.

A detention hearing will be held today to determine whether Saeid Asefi Inanlou, 41, should continue to be held without bail, said Asst. U. S. Atty. Steve Crandall, one of the federal prosecutors in the case.

Crandall said that Inanlou was extradited to San Diego on Monday after being arrested in West Germany. Inanlou pleaded innocent Tuesday before U. S. Magistrate Roger C. McKee on 51 counts of stealing government property, conspiracy, exporting defense articles without a license, and making false statements to customs officers.

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“He is the Iranian connection who was actually funneling the arms . . . directly to Iran,” Crandall said. “Obviously, he’s an important player.”

Faces Long Sentences

If convicted on all counts, Inanlou faces “well over 100 years” in prison terms, Crandall said.

Federal prosecutors believe Inanlou was the European middleman for a 10-person smuggling ring that shipped stolen F-14 jet fighter parts to Iran for repairs to American-made fighter planes purchased under the regime of the late Shah. When the Shah was overthrown and the Ayatollah came to power, the U. S. government embargoed the sale of jet parts to Iran.

Prosecutors say the smuggling ring operated between January, 1981, and July, 1985, illegally exporting parts worth $7 million to $10 million. The jet parts were stolen from Navy ships, as well as military warehouses in the Philippines, Norfolk, Va. and the North Island Naval Air Station in Coronado.

Crandall said Thursday that Inanlou was “certainly one of the three masterminds” in the smuggling ring.

The other two, brothers Edgardo and Franklin Agustin, have already been sentenced for their part in the operation. Edgardo received 18 years and a $100,000 fine, and Franklin was sentenced to 13 years and a $100,000 fine. Most of the others involved in the ring have received sentences ranging from 366 days to seven years.

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According to court testimony and documents made public in previous trials, Edgardo provided the initial contact between his brother and Inanlou. Franklin, a Philippine national living in Tierrasanta, then recruited others--including his wife, two sailors and a civilian worker at a Navy warehouse--to take part in the smuggling ring.

Franklin and his wife, Julie, received the stolen material, hid it in a self-storage locker in Tierrasanta, and shipped it directly to Inanlou in England, prosecutors said.

Telephone records showed Inanlou and Franklin had 130 telephone conversations in one 2 1/2-year period, with 80% of those calls being made “immediately or subsequent to a known (parts) shipment,” court documents said.

Although Inanlou’s prominence in the case was never a question, prosecutors have been continually frustrated in their attempts to have him extradited to San Diego from his London home since the indictments were made public in 1985, said Crandall.

However, Inanlou left London eight months ago for West Germany, and negotiations between the U. S. State Department and the West German government culminated in the Iranian’s arrest and extradition on Monday, officials said.

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