US prosecutors announced charges on Friday in an alleged Iranian plot to assassinate President-elect Donald Trump and a prominent dissident Iranian-American journalist.
The foiled assassination plot on Trump was allegedly directed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to avenge the death of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, who was killed in 2020 in a US strike ordered by then-president Trump, the Justice Department said.
Farhad Shakeri, 51, an Afghan national who is believed to be in Iran, was “tasked” by the IRGC with providing a plan to kill Trump, the department said in a statement.
Shakeri and two other men, Carlisle Rivera, 49, and Jonathon Loadholt, 36, both of New York, were charged separately with plotting to kill an Iranian-American dissident in New York.
Rivera and Loadholt are both in US custody and made a court appearance in New York on Thursday.
“The charges announced today expose Iran’s continued brazen attempts to target US citizens, including President-elect Donald Trump, other government leaders and dissidents who criticize the regime in Tehran,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said.
Trump, who defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in Tuesday’s US presidential election, faced two other separate assassination attempts this year, including a shooting at a campaign rally where a bullet grazed his ear.
Iran’s foreign ministry on Saturday called the allegations that Tehran was behind a plot against Trump “totally unfounded.”
The foreign ministry “rejects allegations that Iran is implicated in an assassination attempt targeting former or current American officials,” spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said in a statement.
Criminal associates
The US Justice Department described suspect Shakeri as an “IRGC asset residing in Tehran.”
It said he immigrated to the United States as a child and was deported around 2008 after serving 14 years in prison for robbery.
“In recent months, Shakeri has used a network of criminal associates he met in prison in the United States to supply the IRGC with operatives to conduct surveillance and assassinations of IRGC targets,” the Justice Department said.
It said Loadholt and Rivera, at Shakeri’s direction, spent months conducting surveillance of a US citizen of Iranian origin who is an outspoken critic of the Iranian government and has been the target of multiple prior kidnapping and murder plots.
She was not identified in court documents but appears to be dissident journalist Masih Alinejad.
A general in the Revolutionary Guard was charged by US prosecutors in late October in connection with a separate plot to assassinate Alinejad, who lives in New York.