Iran slams US court ruling to expropriate NY towerby aletho |
Press TV - April 19, 2014
Tehran
has slammed as illegal a US court ruling to confiscate the assets of
Alavi Foundation in Manhattan, saying the move runs counter to the
principle of religious freedom for American citizens.
“The
recent ruling regarding the forfeiture of the assets belonging to the
foundation is, to all appearances, in contradiction to realities, void
of legal validity and even in breach of US commitments to guarantee
religious freedom for its citizens,” Iran's Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman
Marzieh Afkham said in a Friday statement.
“Contrary
to the prosecutors’ baseless allegations and the court’s
politically-motivated ruling which was a propaganda fuss, the Alavi
Foundation is an independent charity institution in the US which has no
links with Iran,” she added.
Afkham
noted that Iran has been a victim of terrorism itself, dismissing as
ridiculous the US court’s claim that Tehran was involved in the 9/11
attacks.
She argued that the US court verdict brings the credibility of the US judicial system into question.
On Thursday,
Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara said that federal judge Katherine
Forrest approved a deal between the US government and 19 anti-Iran
plaintiffs to sell Alavi Foundation’s 36-story Manhattan skyscraper on
Fifth Avenue and other properties owned by Iran, following a 2008
lawsuit by the government against the building's owners.
Under
the deal, the US Marshals Service will sell the 36-story building and
other so-called Iran-linked property in California, Maryland, Texas,
Virginia and the Queens borough of New York. US authorities will also
receive the contents of bank accounts of the entities which allegedly
served as Iran fronts in the past.
The
US government will receive reimbursement for litigation expenses and
any costs of the sales and the remainder will be distributed among what
the court has called terror-attack victims, including those of the 9/11
attacks and their survivors.
In
September 2013, the judge had ruled in favor of the government's suit,
claiming the building's owners had violated Iran sanctions and money
laundering laws.
Prosecutors
allege the building's owners, the Alavi Foundation -- a non-profit
organization promoting the Islamic culture and Persian language -- and
Assa Corporation, transferred rental income and other funds to Iran.

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