A naturalized U.S. citizen born in Iran and living in Potomac was sentenced Friday, Dec. 20, 2013, to eight years in prison followed by three years of supervised release for conspiring to illegally provide satellite related services to Iran in violation of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and Iran Trade Embargo. Other charges included money laundering and obstruction of bankruptcy proceedings, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which gave the following account of events in a release.
Nader Modanlo, aka Nader Modanlou, aka Nader Modanlu, 53, was also ordered to forfeit $10 million. The case was investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI); the Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation; and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service.
As a result of the conspiracy, an Iranian earth observation satellite equipped with a camera was launched into space from Russia on Oct. 27, 2005. The launch was the first-ever Iranian satellite put into orbit.
“Modanlo violated the law by helping Iran launch communications satellites,” said U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein. “The Iran Trade Embargo prohibits Americans from supplying goods, technology and services to Iran directly or indirectly.”
“This sentencing is the result of a complex, decade-long HSI investigation that spanned multiple countries and involved close partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service and the Internal Revenue Service,” said HSI Baltimore Special Agent in Charge William Winter.
An Executive Order issued in 1995 imposing a trade embargo against Iran, after finding that Iran’s policies and actions posed a threat to the national security of the United States. Under the embargo, the Department of the Treasury, through the Office of Foreign Assets Control, issued the Iranian Transactions Regulations, which prohibited the export, re-export, sale or supply, directly or indirectly, by a U.S. citizen, of goods, technology or services to Iran or the Government of Iran, without prior governmental authorization.
According to evidence presented at the six-week trial, Modanlo was a mechanical engineer who received science and engineering degrees from George Washington University. Modanlo represented that he was an internationally-recognized expert on strategic policy and finances affecting the space-based telecommunications industry, and that he managed space and science programs for the Department of Defense, NASA and the industry.
Trial evidence showed that from January 2000 through Nov. 27, 2007, Modanlo and others concocted an elaborate scheme to evade the Iran trade embargo to conceal Iranian involvement in prohibited activities and transactions. Beginning in 1992, Modanlo was the principal owner, chairman and president of Final Analysis, Inc. (FAI) in Maryland. Beginning in 1994, FAI contracted with POLYOT, an aerospace enterprise company owned by the government of the Russian Federation, to launch FAI telecommunications satellites. Between 1995 through 2000, FAI and POLYOT launched a satellite purchased by FAI, and designed, constructed and launched a second satellite, both from Plesetsk, Russia. Modanlo and other FAI personnel met with POLYOT officials as part of that relationship. As required by law, Modanlo obtained U.S. export licenses in order to export and launch the telecommunications satellites and other equipment from Russia.
In November 2001, Modanlo established New York Satellite Industries, LLC, (NYSI) after creditors filed a petition to place FAI into involuntary bankruptcy. NYSI purchased FAI’s assets and Modanlo served as chairman and managing member of NYSI, using his home address as NYSI’s business address.
Beginning in 2000, Modanlo brokered an agreement between POLYOT and Iran to construct and launch a satellite, according to ICE. Between the summer of 2001 and December 2001, Modanlo engaged in numerous meetings with POLYOT officials to broker Iran’s satellite program. In December 2001, several Iranian officials, including Sirous Naseri, a former Iranian Ambassador to Switzerland, went to Switzerland to express interest in “investing” in NYSI by interposing a Swiss company, because “the U.S. ha[d] sanctions in place against Iran,” and direct investment would therefore be “problematic.” Naseri, Reza Heidari, Mohammad Modares and Modanlo then went to Switzerland in April 2002 to work out the details of forming Prospect Telecom in order to conceal Iranian participation as an investor/lender in Modanlo’s satellite telecommunications activities, according to ICE. Between April and June 2002, Heidari, Mohammad Modares and Abdol Mehrdad established Prospect Telecom and opened a bank account in Switzerland in the name of Prospect Telecom.
Heidari, Modares, and Mehrdad then caused $10 million to be wired into the Prospect Telecom bank account from numerous foreign accounts, including from China and Dubai, and then almost immediately wired the $10 million to Modanlo’s NYSI account in Bowie, Maryland, in consideration for Modanlo’s assistance to Iran and the Iranians in brokering the satellite agreement with Russia, and for NYSI providing telecommunications services in support of that agreement. Modanlo also had agreed that NYSI would assist in obtaining telecommunications service provider licenses for the owners of Prospect Telecom and for the benefit of the Islamic Republic of Iran, according to ICE.
In October 2005, as a result of the efforts of Modanlo and his conspirators, POLYOT launched Iran’s first-ever satellite, a remote sensing and telecommunications satellite from Russia.
From 2005 to 2007, Modanlo made false statements and concealed information about the creation and ownership of Prospect Telecom during bankruptcy proceedings, including that Modanlo and co-conspirators had arranged for the formation of Prospect telecom to conceal Iranian involvement, according to ICE.