by Associated Press | WashingtonPost.com | September 27, 2011
Pete Seda, right, the leader of the U.S. branch of a defunct Islamic charity, stands outside the U.S. District Courthouse in Eugene, Ore., on Tuesday while defense lawyer Steve Wax, center, talks to a reporter. Seda was sentenced to prison for 33 months for helping to smuggle $150,000 to Saudi Arabia in 2000. The judge said that while he believed the money had gone Islamic fighters in Chechnya, the government . Photo: AP
EUGENE, Ore. — The leader of the U.S. branch of a defunct Islamic charity was sentenced Tuesday to nearly three years in prison after being convicted of helping smuggle $150,000 to Saudi Arabia.
U.S. District Judge Michael Hogan said that while he has no doubt the money went to Islamic fighters battling the Russian army in Chechnya, as the prosecution maintained, there’s no proof directly linking Pete Seda to terrorism.
For that reason, Hogan said he wouldn’t apply the so-called “terrorism enhancement” that could have sent Seda to prison for eight years. Instead, Hogan sentenced Seda to 33 months in prison, ordered him to pay the Internal Revenue Service $80,980 in restitution, and allowed him to remain free for 60 days before reporting.
Seda, also known as Pirouz Sedaghaty, is an Iranian-born U.S. citizen who ran the U.S. chapter of the al-Haramain Islamic Foundation based in Ashland. He worked in Ashland as a tree surgeon and was an outspoken proponent of the peaceful aspects of Islam. He was known for marching in the local July 4 parade with his camel.
Seda was convicted last year of tax fraud and conspiracy to defraud the government for helping Saudi Arabian national Soliman Al-Buthe convert a contribution from a doctor in England into traveler’s checks, which Al-Buthe took with him on a flight to Saudi Arabia without declaring it to authorities. Prosecutors have been unable to force Al-Buthe to return to the U.S. to face the same charges as Seda.
Acting U.S. Attorney Dwight Holton said federal prosecutors felt they had proven Seda’s connection to terrorism, but respected the court’s ruling and were satisfied with the sentence.
“Money is the lifeblood of terrorist organizations,” Holton said. “We are working very hard to cut off that lifeline. Shutting down al-Haramain internationally and here was an essential part of that.”
Last week the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the U.S. Treasury Department rightly designated the Oregon branch of the Saudi Arabia-based charity a terrorist organization in 2004 for financing terrorist activities in Chechnya and Albania. But the appeals court found the department improperly seized the group’s assets.
The unanimous three-judge panel found the department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control violated the charity’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure by improperly using a “blocking order” to freeze the charity’s assets without a warrant.
The foundation disbanded after the department froze its assets.
Seda declined to comment, citing the advice of his lawyers. Defense attorney Steve Wax said they planned to appeal both the convictions and the sentence.
Wax said the fact that the judge did not impose the terrorism enhancement gave them a better chance of getting approval for Seda to remain free pending appeal.
“The most important issue with respect to the money going to Chechnya was the judge finding the government did not establish a link to Mr. Seda,” Wax said.
Seda had been scheduled to be sentenced last fall, but Hogan delayed the proceeding after it was revealed an FBI agent had failed to disclose an offer to pay a witness in the case. The judge eventually ruled the matter had no bearing on Seda’s conviction.
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