Iran court overturns ex-US Marine's death sentence

Iran court overturns ex-US Marine's death sentence

TEHRAN - Agence France-Presse

This undated file photo released by his family shows Amir Hekmati. AP Photo

Iran's Supreme Court has overturned the death sentence handed to a former US Marine convicted of espionage, with the penalty being cut to 10 years in jail, media reported Sunday.
      
Amir Hekmati, a dual US-Iranian citizen, was arrested in August 2011, put on trial and found guilty of spying for the CIA. In January 2012, he was sentenced to death.
     
His lawyer was quoted on Sunday as saying the sentence had now been overturned.
      
"The death sentence was overruled in the country's Supreme Court and reduced to a 10-year jail term," attorney Mahmoud Alizadeh Tabatabie told the Sharq daily newspaper.
      
Hekmati, born in the United States to Iranian parents, served as a US Marine and as a private contractor who provided translation services. His family insists he was visiting Iran to see relatives.
      
US lawmakers and his family had appealed to Iran to free him, saying it would serve as a goodwill gesture after Tehran reached an interim deal with the United States and other powers on suspending its nuclear programme.
      
The former Marine's father, Ali Hekmati, who lives in Michigan, has said his son is suffering from a brain tumour.
      
The UN Human Rights Council's Working Group on Arbitrary Detention in December faulted Iran for not charging Hekmati for six months after his arrest and for letting his lawyer see him only briefly, without access to the case file.
      
The panel said Iran's "non-observance of international norms" in the case was "of such gravity as to give the deprivation of liberty of Mr Hekmati an arbitrary character."       

US President Barack Obama raised the case of Hekmati and two other US citizens in a landmark telephone conversation last September with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
      
Since Iran elected the more moderate Rouhani, the Hekmati family has seen hopeful signs with the ex-Marine's grandmother being allowed to visit him.