fbpx

Robert Levinson Case is Open in Iran, where He is Considered a ‘Missing Person’

[additional-authors]
November 10, 2019
US Daniel Levinson (L) shows a picture of his father, ex-FBI agent Robert Levinson, holding his grandson Ryan during a press conference with his mother Christine at the Swiss embassy in Tehran, 22 December 2007. The wife of the former agent missing in Iran since March said today she has received “no answers” about his fate at the end of her trip to the Islamic republic in search of her husband, who Washington says went missing on a visit to the Iranian island of Kish. The Tehran government reiterated earlier it has no information that Levinson had disappeared on its territory. AFP PHOTO/BEHROUZ MEHRI (Photo credit should read BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP via Getty Images)

(JTA) — Iran’s Foreign Ministry said that its case over the 2007 disappearance of Jewish-American former FBI agent Robert Levinson “was a missing person” filing.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi on Sunday told reporters that Levinson “has no judicial or criminal case in any Islamic Republic of Iran court whatsoever,” the Associated Press reported. He said the opening of a missing persons case is “normal,” and “like it’s done for any missing people anywhere in Iran.”

The statement came two days after news, first reported by the Washington Post, that Iran told the United Nations that the Levinson case remains open, saying in a filing to the U.N’s Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances that the case remains before the Revolutionary Court of Tehran, calling it “ongoing.”

Iran’s Revolutionary Court usually hears cases dealing with spies and attempts to overthrow the government, the AP reported.

Levinson, 70, of Coral Springs, Florida, a private investigator and former FBI agent who was also a part-time consultant for the CIA, disappeared on Iran’s Kish Island during what was first called work for a private firms and was later revealed as a rogue CIA operation.

Last week, on the 12th anniversary of his disappearance, the Trump administration announced a $20 million reward from the State Department Rewards for Justice, in addition to the $5 million the FBI has for years offered for information leading to the rescue of its former agent.

Levinson’s family is suing Iran in U.S. federal court in Washington DC, alleging the government of Iran kidnapped him. The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages from Iran, in part for inflicting emotional distress on Levinson’s wife and seven children.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

More news and opinions than at a
Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.