Saturday, May 19, 2007

Former Nuclear Engineer Charged with Breaking Trade Embargo

Via physorg.com -

Mohammad Alavi, 49, also told FBI agents that he left his job at the nation's largest nuclear power plant and moved to Iran to be closer to relatives, according to records obtained by The Arizona Republic.

Alavi, who lived in the U.S. as a naturalized citizen for 30 years, is charged with violating a trade embargo with Iran, which carries a maximum penalty of 21 months in prison. Trial is set for July 3.

Alavi worked at the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station west of Phoenix for 16 years, until he resigned in August and moved to Tehran.

The software he downloaded onto his personal laptop was part of an emergency-training package containing details of the plant's control rooms, reactors and designs. It is not classified, has no links to actual plant workings and can't be used to affect operations.

Employees were encouraged to download the software and work on it at home, according to officials with the Arizona Public Service Co., the Phoenix-based utility company that operates Palo Verde.

APS did not know Alavi had left the country with the information until the Maryland software manufacturer reported attempts to access the training system from a Tehran address.

Alavi was arrested April 8 as he stepped off a plane in Los Angeles. He was returning to the U.S. with his wife for the birth of their first child. He is being held without bail in Arizona.

Alavi acknowledged downloading the software in Iran but said he did it to show relatives and a business associate, according to court records.

The laptop was still in a closet at his mother's house in Tehran, he said.

He told authorities he was about to start a job with an electric-motor company in Tehran.

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This sound kinda silly. They tell their employees to take it home to work on it...he puts it on his personal laptop, and since he is Iranian...he goes back to Iran after the job. Ummmm, hello?

Isn't he just doing what they told him to do? I mean yes, perhaps Mr. Alavi did break the law (I am no lawyer)....but I kind of supirses me that management at Palo Verde didn't see this coming.

But it is all about breaking the embargo, if Mr. Alavi was Indian, I guess it wouldn't be an issue.

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